SIR
Supreme Court raises concerns over Bengal voter deletion. Photo: SC website/ChatGPT
'ECI deviated from Bihar procedure': Supreme Court raises concerns over voter deletion in Bengal SIR
New Delhi : The massive voter revision drive in West Bengal has come under sharper scrutiny, with the Supreme Court of India on Monday expressing concerns over the Special Intensive Revision (SIR) exercise in the poll-bound state, Live Law reported.
What did the court say?
Justice Joymalya Bagchi flagged concerns over the SIR process, stressing the need for a robust appellate tribunal to hear appeals against deletions from around 60 lakh adjudicated cases.
He noted that the Election Commission of India deviated from procedures followed in other states by introducing a category of “logical discrepancy” in West Bengal.
The judge also pointed out inconsistencies with the Bihar SIR, where voters listed in the 2002 electoral roll were not required to submit documents.
“Please see your written submissions in the Bihar case. You had said the 2002 electorate need not give documents,” Justice Bagchi was quoted as saying.
‘100% accuracy not possible’
Justice Bagchi observed that judicial officers verifying lakhs of cases under tight deadlines cannot be expected to deliver 100 percent accuracy.
He noted that even 70 percent accuracy would be “excellent” for someone handling nearly 1,000 cases a day under pressure.
The court also flagged concerns over potential electoral impact if significant numbers of voters are unable to cast their votes due to deletions.
Scale of deletions
Nearly 91 lakh voters have been dropped from the rolls during the controversial SIR exercise.
- Over 27 lakh names deleted from 60 lakh adjudicated cases
- In addition to 63 lakh already removed earlier
The Muslim-majority district of Murshidabad recorded the highest deletions, with around 4.5 lakh names struck off from 11 lakh adjudicated cases.
What does it mean for voters?
The Supreme Court had earlier directed the formation of appellate tribunals to hear appeals against deletions.
However, these are unlikely to conclude hearings before polling begins.
- Phase 1: April 23
- Phase 2: April 29
The court also clarified that interim inclusion of voters who failed verification cannot be permitted.
Why it matters
West Bengal is among five poll-bound states where the SIR exercise is underway—the first large-scale revision since 2002.
With elections just days away, the deletion of nearly 91 lakh voters could significantly impact political strategies and electoral outcomes across the state
Top Headlines
-
News
'ECI deviated from Bihar procedure': Supreme Court raises concerns over voter deletion in Bengal SIR
April 13, 2026
-
News
Indias legendary voice falls silent: Asha Bhosle dies at 92
April 12, 2026
-
News
Nitish Kumar takes Rajya Sabha oath; power shift looms in Bihar
April 10, 2026
-
News
Amit Shah promises UCC, 3,000 aid in BJPs Bengal manifesto
April 10, 2026
-
News
Who will be Bengal CM if BJP wins? Amit Shah breaks silence
April 10, 2026
-
News
'Rape cases will be reopened': PM Modi's 6 guarantees to Bengal; promises 7th pay commission
April 09, 2026
-
News
US military will remain in and around Iran: Trump amid fragile ceasefire
April 09, 2026
-
News
Ceasefire under strain: Iran oil refinery hit hours after US truce begins
April 08, 2026
-
News
US-Iran ceasefire on shaky grounds! Lebanon front threatens to derail fragile truce
April 08, 2026
-
News
Hope to see lasting peace in West Asia: India welcomes US-Iran ceasefire
April 08, 2026




