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#WhereIsMyVote emerged as one of the most trending hashtags on Twitter as thousands in Telangana took to social media to vent their anger at finding their names missing in the voter’s list on Friday.
The missing names and the ensuing anger and chaos outside polling booths across Hyderabad and other districts is not surprising though. The Quint had highlighted that the Election Commission of India had deleted 30 lakh voter names in the state based on an opaque de-duplication software.
The algorithm, source-code or the maker of the software is unknown as the EC has not provided details.
Primary among the concerns raised to the Election Commission of India and Telangana’s Chief Electoral Officer (CEO) in October was the issue of nearly 30 lakh deleted voters from the state’s 2018 electoral roll.
In PILs submitted to the Hyderabad High Court in October and November, petitioners had also questioned the lack of transparency regarding the software employed to weed out duplicate voters. The CEO was also asked if due process was followed in reaching out to the voters whose names were struck off the rolls.
A comparison of voter data between 2014 and 2018 reveals a drastic drop in the number of electors by 29.87 lakh.
The Electoral Roll Data 2018, published by the EC, reveals Telangana’s voter population to be 2.53 crore. This marks a sharp decline from the 2014 data when the number of electors stood at 2.83 crore.
At a press conference in Hyderabad on 25 October, CEC OP Rawat had said that a revised electoral roll in October showed 2.73 crore voters in the state.
According to a report by The News Minute, CEC Rawat, during a visit to Telangana on 25 October, had justified the voter deletions saying that the EC had used the latest technology to purify the electoral rolls.
What is this latest technology? No one really knows.
Srinivas Kodali, a Hyderabad-based independent researcher, had filed a PIL in Hyderabad High Court urging the court to direct the EC to make the algorithm of the software public.
Speaking to The Quint, Kodali said, “The EC has not made public the details of the developer, the software or the algorithm that it deployed in the purification process. The software was used to identify duplicates and delete voters based on the results thrown up by it."
Describing it as an ‘artificial restriction on democracy’, Kodali said:
Telangana’s CEO Rajat Kumar had offered a number of explanations for the large-scale deletions. According to a Livemint report, Kumar, at a press conference, had attributed the drastic fall to mass migration of voters to Andhra Pradesh following the bifurcation of the state.
This explanation, however, does not pass muster because a large-scale migration of Telangana’s electoral population would have resulted in a commensurate increase in voters in Andhra Pradesh. A look at the electoral list of 2018 reveals that Andhra, too, reported a decline in voter population by 21.5 lakh.
In Andhra Pradesh, the state had 3.71 crore voters in 2015. This slid to 3.49 crore in the 2018 list.
The other explanations offered were de-duplication of voters in the electoral rolls as well as deaths of voters.
Rakesh Dubbudu, an RTI campaigner who runs Factly, a public information portal, questioned why such large-scale duplications and deletions have been found in the two states when there are no unique features to justify them.
The ECI, on 31 May 2018, had issued an order calling for a special summary revision of photo electoral rolls across the state of Telangana.
The enrolment campaign was to end on 31 July.
Following enrolment, the EC had ordered the Integrated Draft Electoral Roll on 1 September.
Importantly, the EC had provided for a two-month period for claims and objections from 1 September to 31 October. This was to be followed by a one-month period for disposal of claims and objections.
The final publication of rolls was scheduled for 4 January 2019.
According to this new schedule, the period for claims and objections was reduced from two months to two weeks. Subsequently, the period for disposal of claims and objectives came down from one month to nine days. The final publication of electoral rolls was scheduled for 8 October instead of 4 January.
A PIL filed on 5 October by Telangana Congress leader and former minister, Marri Shashidhar Reddy, contended that this truncated notice by the EC would “unjustifiably create a process that is incapable of curing mass and serious deficiencies of the electoral rolls of Telangana and Andhra Pradesh with regard to several lakhs of voters.”
The Congress in Telangana has alleged a political ‘conspiracy’ in the new truncated schedule. Speaking with The Quint, Telangana Congress president, Uttam Kumar Reddy, said that it had made him “suspicious” of the EC.
The Electoral Registration Officer (ERO) is a quasi-judicial authority and is vested with the power to carry out suo moto deletions, but he has to give reasonable notice to the citizen and also hold a public hearing to listen to any contestations. The provisions pertaining to the deletion of voters are prescribed in the Representation of People Act, 1950 and Registration of Electors Rule, 1960.
Section 22 of the Representation of People Act, 1950
The Act states rules pertaining to correction of entries in electoral roles and states that “before taking any action on any ground under clause” the Electoral Registration Officer “shall give the person concerned a reasonable opportunity of being heard in respect of the action proposed to be taken in relation to him”.
Registration of Electors Rule, 1960
Section 21A (C) states that prior to deletions “the registration officer shall make every endeavour to give him a reasonable opportunity to show cause why the action proposed should not be taken in relation to him.”
Bihar serves as a case study in the false positives and negatives that the software had thrown up in 2015, a year when the state went to polls.
The commission notes that after the field verification when the software was run once again on the voter rolls, it resulted in further duplicates identified in these sanitised rolls.
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Published: 19 Nov 2018,09:21 PM IST