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ECI says 'large number' of foreigners found during Bihar voter list revision

ECI says 'large number' of foreigners found during Bihar voter list revision

Hindustan Times17 hours ago
Election commission officials on Sunday claimed that field-level functionaries of the ECI have found "a large number of people" from Nepal, Bangladesh, and Myanmar during house-to-house visits made for the ongoing intensive review of the voters' list in Bihar. District Election Officer and District Magistrate Aman Sameer carries out a house-to-house visit in various panchayats under the Ekma Assembly Constituency to verify the work being done by Booth Level Officers (BLO) and review the ongoing activities related to the special intensive revision campaign of the voter list, in Saran on Thursday. (District Administration Saran - )
According to a PTI report, the names of illegal migrants will not be included in the final electoral roll to be published on September 30 after a proper enquiry into such people is conducted after August 1.
Citing ground reports, ECI officials said that booth-level officers found "a large number" of people from Nepal, Bangladesh, and Myanmar during house-to-house visits.
The Election Commission will eventually carry out a special intensive revision of electoral rolls across India to weed out foreign illegal migrants by checking their place of birth, the PTI report added.
Meanwhile, the ECI said that as of Saturday evening, 80.11 percent of electors in Bihar had submitted their forms. The commission is moving ahead to complete the collection of Enumeration Forms (EFs) before the stipulated time, July 25.
The Bihar assembly polls are due in October or November this year, and the voter list revision has already become a major topic in state politics.
Assembly polls in five other states—Assam, Kerala, Puducherry, Tamil Nadu, and West Bengal—are due in 2026.
The move assumes significance in the wake of a crackdown in various states on illegal foreign migrants, including from Bangladesh and Myanmar.
Opposition flags Bihar voter list revision
The opposition parties have campaigned against the voter list revision in Bihar, with the leader of the opposition in the Lok Sabha, Rahul Gandhi, recently joining RJD leader Tejaswi Yadav in a rally in Purnea.
Congress has called the exercise 'dangerous and bizarre'. Party leader Abhishek Manu Singhvi said EC's plan to consider voters who were added after 2003 as 'suspects' was an 'arbitrary and legally questionable move.' He made the remarks while addressing a press conference at Indira Bhavan, the Congress headquarters, on Saturday.
The Supreme Court on Thursday asked the ECI to also consider Aadhaar cards, voter IDs and ration cards, as acceptable proof of eligibility for inclusion in electoral rolls in its ongoing revision of the list, even as it agreed to examine whether the poll body's exercise violated legal provisions or could potentially lead to mass disenfranchisement ahead of assembly elections due later this year.
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We have handled both – Operation Sindoor on the ground as well as the post-operation narrative – quite effectively. Maybe because no country openly came out (except two countries) and said Pakistan is the culprit, we are saying we have not succeeded in the war of narratives. That is because we have that expectation that dozens of countries would stand up and say that Pakistan is the villain, Pakistan is the culprit. But to say that Pakistan has gained in popularity is far from reality. I travelled after Operation Sindoor to at least eight countries. Everybody – foreign ministers, ministers – knows the potential of the Pakistan administration for creating trouble or promoting terror. Their stock has not gone up. Another lesson that we should learn is that in the new world, wars are going to be very different. In this era, you can't finally decide who is the victor and who is the vanquished. That's exactly what Pakistan tried to do. In spite of being badly beaten by India, badly suffering, it also claimed that it stood up to India. Nobody really believes that in the outside world. On new capitalism | Welfarism is essentially a very liberal idea; you can say a communist idea. But it had to be incorporated for capitalism to survive. National capitalism, regional capitalism will come back Pakistan-exported terrorism is not new in India. We have had worst instances like the Parliament and Mumbai attacks. How many countries really stood up and said Pakistan should be blamed? They blamed terror organisations, they blamed those individuals. There is a way countries respond because of various geopolitical or geo-strategic situations in which they operate. But that doesn't mean they are not standing with us. Every country stood by us on terrorism and India being the victim time and again. And they all believed that it was happening from across the border. That's the reason why the FATF (Financial Action Task Force) went after Pakistan for years. Pakistan manages to escape sanctions, thanks to its friends, but that doesn't mean people are giving it a clean chit. In that sense, our outreach efforts have definitely helped us. Vikas Pathak: In your book, you have talked about the need for India to focus only on economic growth in the next 20 years. At the same time, we have identity politics playing out everywhere. Do you think any economic development agenda is tenable in this scenario? I actually compare India with what happened in China in the 1980s and 90s under its leader Deng Xiaoping and his successors. Those 20 years were very pragmatic for China. In fact, Deng went to the extent of telling his Communist Party that 'I don't care about the colour of the cat as long as it is catching the mice.' They asked him about contracts to Western companies, he said his focus was not on communist ideology, just economic growth. Issues will keep cropping up in India because we are a diverse society but leadership has to now seriously focus on the economy for at least the next 10 to 15 years. Unless India becomes a 10 trillion dollar economy, there is no way we can play any big role in the world. Even with $10 trillion, our per capita will be around $6,500, which is half of that of China today. By the time we reach $10,000, they will go somewhere else. The leadership's focus has to be on economic growth. I'm sure that is what the government is doing.

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