
Parliament heats up over Bihar roll revision
RJD and Trinamool Congress also raised similar concerns, claiming the drive could lead to mass deletions of voters from marginalised communities, especially in rural and minority-dominated regions. "It's a backdoor method to rig elections before they begin," RJD leaders said in Lok Sabha.Shambhavi Choudhary MP, Lok Janshakti Party (Ram Vilas), told India Today,"The opposition is scared in Bihar. They are losing, that's why they are now talking about SIR. These statements are useless, that's why they are saying all these. The Opposition knows that they are losing, that's the reason why they have started building this narrative."Congress MP Shashi Tharoor echoed Choudhary, calling the SIR a "backdoor attempt at voter suppression", while RJD leader Manoj Jha termed it a "deletion drive".The Opposition demanded an immediate halt to the process and called for an all-party oversight committee.JDU leader and Union minister Ram Nath Thakur said,"They are in opposition. Certainly they will raise this, but they should also provide evidence against their claims.CENTRE AND ECI DEFEND SIRIn response, the central government said that the SIR is a routine process and follows the guidelines set by the Election Commission. Law Minister Arjun Ram Meghwal said in Parliament, "There is no agenda behind this. The EC is simply ensuring a clean and updated electoral roll'.He added that no individual would be "unfairly removed" from the electoral rolls and the revision followed legal procedures.The ECI has time and again maintained that this process is being done transparently, with public notices and grievance redressal systems in place. The poll body has said that the revision ensures electoral integrity by removing fake or deceased voters and that anyone wrongly removed can appeal.CONCERNS OVER TRANSPARENCY AND TIMINGadvertisementDespite these assurances, civil society groups and legal experts have raised eyebrows over the sudden urgency of conducting the SIR.ECI has filed its response in the Supreme CourtThe poll body has responded in the Supreme Court to petitions challenging the Special Intensive Revision of voter rolls in Bihar. It emphasised that the SIR is an inclusive process and every effort is being made to ensure no eligible voter is left out.Here's what the ECI said:advertisementThe petitions are based on misleading and outdated media reports — not factsIt's a deliberate attempt to twist the narrative and paint the voter revision in a negative lightThe data quoted by the petitioners is old and incorrectInterestingly, many of the petitioners are MPs and MLAs from parties that officially support SIR — and their own booth agents are part of the processThe case is based on suspicion, not reality — no one has lost their voting rights and no violation has taken placeWHY SIR?Many parties had earlier raised concerns about errors in existing voter lists. The SIR is meant to clean up the rolls and restore public trust. It's not just Bihar, the revision is a nationwide exercise. However, Bihar has fast-tracked it due to upcoming elections.The next Supreme Court hearing is scheduled for July 28.- EndsTune InMust Watch
IN THIS STORY#Bihar#Bihar Assembly Elections#Parliament
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Indian Express
8 minutes ago
- Indian Express
Mamata slams Shah for SIR: ‘Show your parents' birth certificates first
In a scathing attack on the BJP and Union Home Minister over the detention and deportation of Bengali migrants and the controversial Special Intensive Revision (SIR) of electoral rolls, West Bengal Chief Minister Mamata Banerjee on Wednesday challenged Amit Shah to produce the birth certificates of his parents. Addressing a Bhasha Andolan rally in tribal-dominated Jhargram, the TMC supremo alleged that SIR, which was recently conducted by the Election Commission in poll-bound Bihar, was a backdoor way of implementing the NRC (National Register of Citizens) in the country 'to systematically disenfranchise minorities, tribals, and opposition supporters'. 'They (ECI) are asking for the birth certificates of people's parents. Where will they get those from? I want to ask today. Do BJP leaders themselves have their parents' birth certificates? Mr Amit Shah, arrest me if I am wrong. Do you have your parents' birth certificates? Show that first. Then talk about removing people's names from the voters' list. When BJP leaders come here, we will hit the streets and protest,' she said. 'Previously, children were born at home. Where will the certificate come from? Now everything is based on 2002. Those who are demanding this, do they have their birth certificates,' she asked. Calling the citizenship notices issued to two West Bengal residents by the BJP government in Assam, 'unconstitutional and illegal', the chief minister said: 'Notices are being served to members of the Tapashili and Rajbanshi communities from Assam… We strongly condemn this. This is a veiled attempt to implement NRC. Shame on the BJP.' 'People are committing suicide out of fear of the NRC. Who will take responsibility for this? Tribals, minorities, and Tapashilis are facing persecution across the country. If they try to snatch away the rights of the people, they'll have to go over our bodies,' the chief minister asserted, urging people not to respond to the notices. 'This conspiracy of implementing the NRC through the back door will not be tolerated. We will not give up an inch of land without a fight. How dare they serve NRC notices to people here? Do not respond to those notices. Live here in Bengal peacefully,' the chief minister said. Mamata also threatened to take up the issue of persecution of Bengalis at global forums if it didn't stop immediately. 'If they remove the names of genuine Bengalis from the electoral rolls, I will travel the world and expose their (BJP's) true faces,' Banerjee warned. 'I never speak about our country to the outside world. But if this continues, I will not remain silent. If Bengal faces atrocities, I will tell the whole world how this government is torturing us,' she said, after taking part in a 3-km-long protest march. Referring to BJP IT Cell chief Amit Malviya's comment that there is no language called Bengali, the TMC supremo said if the Opposition party leaders attack the Bengali language or Bengal's people, she will not stay silent. 'Who gave birth to India's freedom struggle and social awakening? Without Bengal, neither India nor the world can move forward. Bengal's talent is spread across the globe. And what are you doing today?' she said. Drawing from history to bolster her point, the TMC chief said, 'Today, if someone speaks Bengali, they are jailed and labelled as Bangladeshi or Rohingya. I want to ask them, in which language did Rabindranath Tagore, Kazi Nazrul Islam, Netaji, Swami Vivekananda, and Raja Ram Mohan Roy speak? In which language was the National Anthem written? Who composed our National Song?' The Bengal BJP condemned her attack on Amit Shah, calling her remarks 'unbecoming of a chief minister' and reflective of her 'growing political desperation.


Time of India
35 minutes ago
- Time of India
Matters pending before judiciary can't be discussed in Parliament: Rijiju on SIR debate
NEW DELHI: Matters pending before the judiciary cannot be discussed on the floor of the House, the govt asserted on Wednesday in Lok Sabha in response to continued demand from opposition parties for a discussion on the SIR exercise in Bihar. Addressing the House, parliamentary affairs minister Kiren Rijuju said the functioning of autonomous institutions, such as the Election Commission, cannot be discussed in Parliament. Rijiju cited a 1988 ruling by then LS speaker Bal Ram Jhakar that under the existing constitutional provisions, the House cannot comment upon the actions of EC. "On the issue of special intensive revision of electoral rolls in Bihar for which they (opposition members) are disturbing the House from first day of the session, we all know that the matter is under consideration of SC and as such it is sub judice, and hence, a discussion cannot be held on the subject," he said.

Hindustan Times
38 minutes ago
- Hindustan Times
In Supreme Court, EC may share same draft roll it gave to political parties
New Delhi: The Election Commission of India (ECI) is likely to inform the Supreme Court that it had shared the draft electoral rolls of Bihar with various political parties on August 1 and had also circulated lists detailing reasons for the deletion of nearly 6.5 million electors, people familiar with the matter told HT on Wednesday. The Election Commission of India headquarters in New Delhi(File Photo) The top court, which is hearing a bunch of petitions challenging the ECI's ongoing special intensive revision (SIR) of electoral rolls in poll-bound Bihar, on Wednesday directed the poll body to file to file a reply by August 9 in response to allegations that over 6.5 million names were deleted from the draft rolls. An official aware of the matter, requesting anonymity, said: 'The roll shared with parties on August 1 has detailed classifications of the 65 lakh (6.5 million) deletions. While there is no separate category for those who didn't fill enumeration forms, they have been grouped under 'migrated'. Suspected foreign nationals are also under review and listed under the same head, but they are being separately verified by electoral registration officers (EROs).' The top court's order came on a plea filed by the Association for Democratic Reforms (ADR), a non-profit working on electoral and political reforms, alleging that ECI removed a column titled 'Uncollectable Reason' from the version of the draft roll published on August 1. The petition also sought disclosure of booth-wise deletions and their reasons. The top court asked ECI to inform it when were the draft rolls shared to the parties, which parties received these rolls, as well as to submit the list of deleted names. The official cited above said the draft rolls were handed over to all political parties by district collectors at 11 am on August 1, and published on the ECI's website at 3 pm the same day. Booth-level data, the official added, was shared with political party representatives. In a press note on July 25, the commission had said that 2.2 million electors were found deceased, 700,000 were registered in more than one place, and 3.5 million had either migrated permanently or were untraceable. After top court's direction on Wednesday, ECI issued a press note saying: '…lists of electors found dead, permanently shifted, having duplicate entries, or uncontactable after at least three visits by Booth Level Officers (BLOs) had been shared with all political parties and their BLAs on or before July 20.' It further shared a series of posts with various BLAs saying they have received the draft electoral roll and separately a list of the 6.5 million individuals removed from the roll. ECI also said that between August 1 and August 6 (9 AM), no political party had filed claims or objections related to the draft roll. However, 3,659 individual objections and claims have been submitted directly by electors. The Communist Party of India (Marxist-Leninist) rejected EC's 'no objections' received remarks, saying EC is trying to create an impression that everything is fine with the Bihar SIR and there are no complaints coming in. 'Nothing could be farther from the truth', the opposition party said in a post on X, listing several concerns, including the claim that its leaders had submitted complaints which were not being counted because they were not routed through BLAs. It also questioned the assumption that all 15,000 Form 6 applications received were from first-time voters and not from electors who had been deleted from the rolls. 'We have been repeatedly asking the EC to provide us with booth level lists of deletion specifying the ground thereof, but to no avail,' the Left party added.