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'Another way to get back NRC': Rajya Sabha MP Kapil Sibal on revision of electoral rolls in Bihar

'Another way to get back NRC': Rajya Sabha MP Kapil Sibal on revision of electoral rolls in Bihar

Time of India8 hours ago
Rajya Sabha MP
Kapil Sibal
on Saturday while addressing the issue of
Special Intensive Revision
(SIR) exercise in Bihar said that it is "another way to get back
NRC
" and alleged that the government wants to impose "authoritarian" rule in the country.
Sibal further alleged a "partnership" between the
Election Commission of India
and the BJP, claiming that in Maharashtra, the votes were increased, whereas in Bihar, they will decrease.
"It is being said that this exercise is a pilot project; It is another way to get back NRC...They want to impose
majoritarian rule
in India..They don't want anyone else to come to power in India. In Maharashtra, they increased the number of votes, and here they are reducing them. It is my allegation that there is a partnership between the Election Commission and them (BJP)", Kapil Sibal told ANI.
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The Supreme Court on Thursday allowed the Election Commission to continue with its exercise of conducting a Special Intensive Revision (SIR) of electoral rolls in poll-bound Bihar.
A bench of Justices Sudhanshu Dhulia and Joymalya Bagchi did not stay the SIR process but asked the ECI to consider allowing Aadhaar, ration cards, and electoral photo identity cards as admissible documents to prove voter identity during the SIR of electoral rolls being undertaken in Bihar.
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"We are of the prima facie opinion that in the interest of justice, the Election Commission will also include documents like Aadhaar, Ration Card, Voter ID card, etc.. It is for the ECI to decide whether it wants to accept the documents or not, and if it does not, then provide reasons for its decision, which shall be sufficient to satisfy the petitioners. Meanwhile, petitioners are not pressing for an interim stay," the bench stated in its order.
In its order, the top court noted that the timeline for the process is very short since elections in Bihar are due in November.
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Environmental challenges: Vidarbha and Marathwada, where cotton, soybeans, and pulses dominate, have only 10–12% irrigation coverage, compared to 60% in western Maharashtra's sugarcane belt. Farmers rely on erratic monsoons, worsened by climate extremes—droughts, unseasonal rains and hailstorms. Groundwater depletion forces farmers to drill borewells up to 1,000 feet, escalating costs. In 2015, reservoirs like Manjara had zero live storage. Similar shortages persist elsewhere. Kailash Arjun Nagare's suicide in March 2025, after a 10-day hunger strike for irrigation water from the Khadakpurna reservoir, highlights the desperation caused by water scarcity. Declining yields and market volatility: Crop yields have plummeted, particularly for cotton. Sanjay Patil, a farmer from Dhule, told this newspaper that cotton yields have dipped from 10-12 quintals per acre to 2-3 quintals, with prices falling from Rs10,000-12,000 to Rs5,000-6,000 per quintal. Social and psychological pressures: Rising costs for education, healthcare, and daily needs outpace farmers' stagnant incomes, creating a stark income-expense gap. Jawandhia notes that unlike government employees, who receive inflation-linked dearness allowances and salary hikes, farmers lack such protections. Financial strain, coupled with limited access to mental health services, fuels depression. The suicide of Sachin and Jyoti Jadhav, a farmer couple from Parbhani in April 2025, which orphaned their two daughters, indicates the urgent need to address mental health issues on a war footing. Government response In the Constitutional scheme of things, agriculture is a state subject, but many important decisions in the sector are taken by the Central government, said Jawandhia. 'I raised this issue before MS Swaminathan when he was chairman of the National Commission of Farmers. He laughed and agreed to recommend to the Central government to put agriculture in the Concurrent list. 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For their part, states put out data on the assistance given to the next of kin of the eligible victims. But empirical evidence of the measures turning the tide of suicides is hard to come by. Welfare measures and issues Compensation: Rs1 lakh for families of deceased farmers, but only 376 of 767 suicide cases between January-March 2025 were approved, with Rs295 lakh sought by eight districts and only Rs18 lakh disbursed MSP: Limited procurement through 562 centres fails to prevent sub-MSP sales Financial support: Rs12,000 annual aid (Rs6,000 each from the Central and state governments under the PM Kisan Samman Nidhi) offset by GST and rising input cost Counselling: Psychological support sessions aim to deter suicides but lack scale Sugarcane-centric: Deputy Chief Minister Ajit Pawar proposed a law to protect sugarcane farmers. Cotton farmers, predominant in Vidarbha, feel neglected due to the political influence of sugarcane cooperatives. 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As for Jawandhia, he said, "The Thackeray cousins came together on the issue of Marathi language and opposed the imposition of Hindi in Maharashtra, but why are no politicians coming together for the cause of the state's farmers?" Going forward Addressing the crisis of farm suicides requires structural reforms: MSP regime: Enforcing MSP as a legal right could ensure fair prices, said Jawandia. Besides, no crop should be sold below MSP Irrigation infrastructure: Expanding irrigation in Vidarbha and Marathwada, potentially through projects like Khadakpurna dam, is critical. Lack of irrigation facilities has claimed scores of lives of farmers, with Nagare's suicide one among them Mental health support: Scaling up counseling could address psychological distress Nagare's suicide note demanded action; the Jadhavs' deaths orphaned their daughters. Until debt, water scarcity, and market volatility are addressed, Maharashtra's farms will remain a graveyard for its farmers.

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