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Why are Bihar’s electoral rolls being revised? | Explained

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The Election Commission of India (EC) has initiated a Special Intensive Revision (SIR) of the electoral rolls in Bihar before the general elections for its Legislative Assembly.

What is an electoral roll?

Article 324 of the Constitution provides that the superintendence, direction and control of the preparation of electoral rolls for the conduct of elections to Parliament and State legislature shall vest with the EC. Article 326 provides that every citizen who is not less than 18 years of age shall be entitled to be registered as a voter (elector).

The electoral rolls are prepared by the EC as per the provisions of the Representation of the People Act, 1950 (RP Act). Section 16 of the RP Act disqualifies a non-citizen from being enrolled in the electoral roll. Section 19 requires that the person is not less than 18 years of age on the qualifying date and is ordinarily resident in the constituency.

Section 20 of the RP Act provides the meaning of the term ‘ordinarily resident’. It specifies that a person shall not be deemed to be ‘ordinarily resident’ in a constituency simply because he/she owns or possesses a dwelling house in such constituency. However, at the same time, a person ‘temporarily absent’ from his/her place of residence shall continue to be ‘ordinarily resident’ therein.

Why has an SIR been initiated?

Section 21 of the RP Act deals with the preparation and revision of electoral rolls. It authorises the EC to carry out a special revision of the electoral roll at any time for reasons to be recorded.

The Election Commission has noted that there have been large scale additions and deletions to the electoral rolls over the last 20 years due to rapid urbanisation and migration. This has increased the possibility of duplicate entries in the roll. The Commission is constitutionally obligated to ensure that only citizens are enrolled in the electoral rolls. Accordingly, the EC has decided to carry out an SIR for the entire country, starting with Bihar.

The last such SIR was carried out for Bihar in the year 2003. Since the Bihar Assembly elections are due in November, the EC has presently laid down the guidelines for an SIR of the Bihar electoral roll with the qualifying date as July 1, 2025.

During the last SIR, enumerators were sent for house-to-house verification with a copy of the details of the existing voters. However, in the present SIR, every elector will have to submit an enumeration form to their respective Booth Level Officers (BLOs). For electors registered in the electoral roll as of January 2003 (on the basis of the last SIR), no further documents are required to be submitted except the extract of the 2003 electoral roll. However, electors registered after January 2003, have to additionally submit documents for establishing the date and place of birth for themselves and their parent(s) as required. The schedule for the current SIR is provided in Table 1.

What are the pros and cons?

There have been arguments for and against the SIR made by various stakeholders. The key issues of contention are summarised below.

The process and time required for the entire exercise: Proponents in support of the SIR in its present form argue that the SIR in 2003 was carried out in 31 days without technological support. This time also the same amount of time will be taken for the exercise with technology. Moreover, there are more than one lakh BLOs, nearly 4 lakh volunteers and more than 1.5 lakh Booth Level Agents (BLAs), appointed by political parties, to ensure the smooth implementation of this exercise.

Counter arguments against the SIR in its present form state that it is a humungous task which involves the submission of forms by all eight crore voters that has never been done before. Furthermore, close to three crore voters would be required to submit documents establishing their date and place of birth for themselves and their parents. Migrant labourers and students may not be able to submit their enumeration forms within the deadline. Despite the presence of so many field level workers, there can be potential errors in inclusion and exclusion.

The exclusion of Aadhaar as a document for registration: Proponents of the SIR in its present form say that the Aadhaar is neither a proof of date of birth nor of citizenship. The Aadhaar card itself carries a disclaimer stating that it can’t be used as proof of citizenship. Hence, in line with constitutional and legal requirements, the Aadhaar has been excluded as a valid document. The list of valid documents include caste certificates, family registers and land allotment certificates.

Proponents against the SIR in its present form argue that the Aadhaar has become an omnibus identity card for all sections of society, especially the under privileged who may not possess any other document. Form 6 for the inclusion of new voters as per the Registration of Electors Rules, 1960 (RER) requires that Aadhaar be provided compulsorily unless the person doesn’t have one. It is mentioned as a proof of date of birth and place of residence as per Form 6. These rules were made by the Central government as per the RP Act. It is only in the SIR guidelines that the EC has added a declaration form to be submitted along with Form 6, with additional documents other than Aadhaar for the purposes of establishing date and place of birth.

Exclusion of migrants from the electoral roll: Arguments for the SIR in its present form state that the RP Act provides that only citizens who are ‘ordinarily resident’ should be included in the electoral roll of a constituency. Migrants who have moved away for long periods of time on account of education or employment would be included in the electoral roll of the constituency of their current residence as per provisions of the RP Act and the RER.

However, counter arguments posit that the RP Act provides that ‘persons temporarily absent’ do not cease to be ‘ordinarily resident’. Many migrant workers shift to other places within the State or outside the State but return at regular intervals to their place of birth/ upbringing. The families and properties of such migrants may continue in the same location where they would want to retain their right to vote. The EC, as recently as January 2023, had indicated its intention of providing a remote voting facility for such migrant workers subject to technical feasibility and acceptance by all stakeholders.

What can be the way forward?

To provide an analogy, the inclusion of an ineligible name in the electoral roll is like a guilty person going scot-free, while the exclusion of an eligible voter is akin to one innocent person suffering. Both these prospects would be a blight on democracy. Therefore, electoral rolls should be thoroughly checked and verified.  

First, the proposed timelines for the completion of such a mammoth exercise are stretched. The EC should ensure that adequate safeguards are put in place for the completion of the exercise without errors. The BLAs should actively participate to prevent errors of omission or addition.

Secondly, the exclusion of Aadhaar from the list of valid documents can create issues for many, especially the underprivileged. After considering the ground realities during the first phase of the enumeration, the EC should adequately tailor the process, during the claims and objections phase, to ensure that no eligible citizen is excluded due to their inability to produce any document from the list of valid documents.

Finally, migrant workers should not be removed from the rolls as that can result in significant deletions. Many such migrants have exercised their right to vote in the place of their birth/upbringing as per their choice and should continue to do so. It is pertinent to note that as per the amendment of the RP Act in 2010, non-resident Indians who have shifted out of India, even for the long term on account of employment, education or otherwise, are entitled to register and vote in the constituency in which their address as per passport is located. The issue of duplicate voter IDs for the same person in different constituencies should be addressed through Aadhaar seeding for which the EC had begun its consultative process in March 2025.

Rangarajan. R is a former IAS officer and author of ‘Courseware on Polity Simplified’. He currently trains at Officers IAS Academy. Views expressed are personal.

Published – July 07, 2025 08:30 am IST

India

Tiger kills woman, injures two in Uttar Pradesh’s Pilibhit

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Two tigers attacked villagers in separate incidents within three hours in Pilibhit district on Thursday (July 17, 2025), killing one woman and injuring two others. Citing inaction, locals staged a protest in front of the administration, which sought to take custody of the body for a postmortem examination. The villagers claimed that despite numerous instances of man-animal conflict and sightings of tigers,the authorities failed to provide security to humans.

In Bithra Mandaria village, Trishna, 50, was mauled to death by a tiger. Her half-eaten body was recovered from a sugarcane field. Half an hour later, Nilesh, 20, was attacked by the tiger. The injured boy was saved after his friend fought off the tiger with a stick. The tiger injured another local from a neighbouring village who was working on his farmland. Both the injured are receiving treatment at a government hospital. Top district officials, including District Magistrate Gyanendra Singh, visited the affected areas and pacified the locals. 

Divisional Forest Officer Bharat Kumar said a trained team has been deployed at the spot following official approval for the tiger’s capture. The District officials directed forest officials to intensify surveillance and deploy expert teams to track the tigers. This is the seventh tiger attack in Pilibhit district since April 2025. On July 15, a farmer was mauled to death by a tigress barely metres away from his hut when he had gone to check his sugarcane crop in Phulhar village near the Pilibhit Tiger Reserve (PTR).

The areas near the Pilibhit Tiger Reserve, located in Pilibhit district, frequently witness man-animal conflict. The northern edge of the reserve lies along the Indo-Nepal border, while the southern boundary is marked by the river Sharada and Khakra. A study done by the Wildlife Institute of India (WII) shows that the Dudhwa-Pilibhit population has high conservation value as it represents the only tiger population with the ecological and behavioral adaptations of the tiger unique to the Tarai region.

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India

Operation Sindoor delivered a strong message on security: Amit Shah

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Union Home and Cooperation Minister Amit Shah greets the gathering at the ‘Sahakar and Rozgar Utsav’, at Dadia in Jaipur.

Union Home and Cooperation Minister Amit Shah greets the gathering at the ‘Sahakar and Rozgar Utsav’, at Dadia in Jaipur.
| Photo Credit: ANI

Union Home Minister Amit Shah said on Thursday (July 17, 2025) that India had sent an “unambiguous” message to the world that any attempt to harm its citizens would invite retaliation. “In contrast, the country faced terror attacks almost every day during Congress rule,” he said.

Mr. Shah, who also holds the Cooperative portfolio in the Union Cabinet, was addressing a cooperative and employment festival, marking International Cooperatives Year-2025, at Dadiya village near Jaipur. He referred to Operation Sindoor, affirming that it had eliminated terrorists based in Pakistan.

“When the Uri attack occurred, [Prime Minister] Narendra Modi took decisive action by carrying out the surgical strike. After the Pulwama attack, an airstrike was ordered. After the attack in Pahalgam, Operation Sindoor was sanctioned, which targeted terrorists across the border,” Mr. Shah said.

Fourth largest economy

Mr. Shah said the country had become the fourth largest economy under Mr. Modi’s leadership, while 22 crore people had been lifted above the poverty line. The vision of a “prosperous and secure nation” had been turned into a reality under the present dispensation, he added.

Meanwhile, veteran Congress leader and former Rajasthan Chief Minister Ashok Gehlot on Thursday asked Mr. Shah to clarify why the trial in Udaipur tailor Kanhaiya Lal’s murder case was not making headway after the National Investigation Agency (NIA) took over the matter. Two cleaver-wielding men had murdered Mr. Lal in June 2022, when Mr. Gehlot was the CM.

Mr. Gehlot said at a press conference here, ahead of Mr. Shah’s address at the event, that though the State police had apprehended the accused within four hours of the incident, NIA took over the case overnight. “Three years later, even the statements [of witnesses] have not been recorded in the court,” he said.

CM Sharma praised

Mr. Shah praised Chief Minister Bhajan Lal Sharma for launching public welfare and development works and said the BJP government in the State had taken strong action against paper leaks in recruitment exams by forming a Special Investigation Team.

He also pointed to the cooperative sector’s contribution to development and said it was playing an active role in 98% of rural areas. The Ministry of Cooperation had launched 61 initiatives in the last four years to strengthen the sector, he said.

Mr. Shah flagged off 100 new police vehicles, visited an exhibition of cooperative products, and distributed appointment letters to youths selected for government jobs. He also virtually inaugurated 24 food grain storage warehouses and 64 millet outlets on the occasion.

Besides the CM Mr. Sharma, Union Minister of Culture & Tourism Gajendra Singh Shekhawat, Deputy CMs Prem Chand Bairwa and Diya Kumari, and former CM Vasundhara Raje were also present.

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India

CMC Vellore, Kotak Mahindra collaborate to treat eye cancer among children

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The Christian Medical College (CMC), Vellore, has launched advanced ophthalmic diagnostic and therapeutic services for patients with eye cancers, especially children with retinoblastoma, the most common type of childhood eye cancer, as well as retinopathy of prematurity, an eye disease seen in preterm births.

The Christian Medical College (CMC), Vellore, has launched advanced ophthalmic diagnostic and therapeutic services for patients with eye cancers, especially children with retinoblastoma, the most common type of childhood eye cancer, as well as retinopathy of prematurity, an eye disease seen in preterm births.
| Photo Credit: Special Arrangement

The Christian Medical College (CMC) has launched advanced ophthalmic diagnostic and therapeutic services for patients with eye cancers, especially children with retinoblastoma, the most common type of childhood eye cancer, as well as retinopathy of prematurity, an eye disease seen in preterm births, in Vellore recently.

According to a press release, the equipment, funded by Kotak Mahindra Bank Limited (KMBL) under its CSR initiative, included the retinal wide-field digital system – a high-end widefield camera for imaging the insides of affected eyes. The initiative also included a diode laser transpupillary thermotherapy unit – a laser machine to treat eye tumours, a new tonometer for measuring eye pressure, as well as a selective laser trabeculoplasty software to treat glaucoma, the second most common cause of preventable blindness.

In his address, Vikram Mathews, Director, CMC Vellore, said that retinoblastoma is a curable cancer when diagnosed early and treated promptly. “With this state-of-the-art equipment, CMC will be able to double the number of patients being benefited. CMC is the only hospital for a 140 km radius around Vellore that offers this service,” he said.

Himanshu Nivsarkar of Kotak Mahindra Bank said that access to quality healthcare should be a right, especially for children battling life-threatening conditions like eye cancer. “Through the partnership with CMC, the bank will help to transform the lives of young patients and their families,” he said.

The initiative supports the procurement of an advanced life support (ICU) ambulance to facilitate seamless inter-hospital transfers for the Emergency Medical Service (EMS) of CMC. The CMC’s EMS doctors, paramedics, and nurses cater to around 1,000 critically-ill adult and paediatric patients every month, the release said.

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