Petitioners challenged the Election Commission's (EC)Special Intensive Revision (SIR) of electoral rolls in Bihar in the Supreme Court.
Petitioners cited EC's 2003 guidelines, stating enumerators were not to determine citizenship during the intensive revision of electoral rolls.
The EC's June 24 order for the SIR deemed the 2003 rolls as probative evidence of citizenship, requiring those added after to submit proof of eligibility.
Petitioners claim the 2003 intensive revision (IR) was fundamentally different from the SIR, and should not be used as a precedent.
Preliminary analysis shows 68.66 lakh names were deleted and 21.53 lakh added after SIR, reducing total electors from 7.89 crore to 7.42 crore.
Detailed Insights:
The Association for Democratic Reforms, represented by lawyer Prashant Bhushan, submitted the EC's 2003 guidelines which the EC had not made public.
The 2003 guidelines tasked enumerators (now Booth Level Officers) with house-to-house visits to enter eligible electors on a 'record of enumeration'.
Unlike the SIR, the 2003 IR did not require all electors to submit documents, but enumerators could ask for proof in case of doubt about age, residence, or family shifting.
The EC stated the SIR was needed due to the inclusion of foreign nationals on the rolls, but the 2003 guidelines clarified it was not an exercise to check citizenship.
Petitioners argue that after the SIR, 10% of Bihar's adult population is not registered to vote, as the number of electors is 7.42 crore while the estimated adult population is 8.22 crore in 2025.
Key Concepts Involved:
Electoral Roll: A list of persons eligible to vote in an election.
Enumerator (Booth Level Officer): Official responsible for updating voter lists at the ground level.
Citizenship: Legal status of a person recognized as a member of a state, with associated rights and duties.