She alleged that the SIR in Bengal is being carried out in an "unplanned, dangerous" manner that has "crippled the process from day one". The Chief Minister accused the Election Commission of thrusting the SIR upon officials and citizens "without basic preparedness, adequate planning or clear communication", claiming that critical gaps in training, confusion over mandatory documents, and the "near-impossibility" of BLOs meeting voters during working hours had rendered the entire exercise "structurally unsound".
Mamata urged the CEC to "intervene decisively" to halt the ongoing exercise, stop "coercive" measures, provide proper training and support, and "thoroughly reassess" the present methodology and timelines. "If this path is not corrected without delay, the consequences for the system, the officials and the citizens will be irreversible," she wrote, calling this a moment that demands "responsibility, humanity, and decisive corrective action".
The three-page letter, among her strongest yet, painted a grim portrait of booth-level officers stretched "far beyond human limits". "They are expected to manage their principal duties, many being teachers and frontline workers, while simultaneously conducting door-to-door surveys and handling complex e-submissions," she wrote, adding that most were struggling with online forms due to lack of training, server failures, and repeated data mismatches. The consequence, she warned, is a "looming breakdown". "At this pace, it is almost certain that by December 4, voter data across multiple constituencies cannot be uploaded with required accuracy," the Chief Minister said.
Under extreme pressure and "fear of punitive action", many BLOs were being pushed into filing incorrect or incomplete entries, risking disenfranchisement of genuine voters and "eroding the integrity of the electoral roll". Mamata reserved some of her sharpest criticism for what she described as the Election Commission's "indefensible" response, not support, but "intimidation". She alleged that the Office of the CEO, West Bengal, was issuing show-cause notices "without justification", threatening already strained BLOs with disciplinary action instead of acknowledging "the reality on the ground".
Compounding the strain, she wrote, was the timing of the SIR. Bengal is at the peak of paddy harvest and in the middle of Rabi sowing, a strictly time-bound window, especially for potato cultivation, she said. "Millions of farmers and labourers are engaged in essential agricultural work and cannot be expected to abandon the fields to participate in SIR enumeration," she said. But it was the human cost that Mamata described as "now unbearable".
The Chief Minister cited the suicide of an anganwadi worker serving as a BLO in Jalpaiguri district's Mal area, reportedly under "crushing SIR-related pressure", adding that "several others have lost their lives since this process began".
0 Response to "Halt 'chaotic, coercive' SIR of voter rolls: Mamata to CEC "
Post a Comment
Disclaimer Note:
The views expressed in the articles published here are solely those of the author and do not necessarily reflect the official policy, position, or perspective of Kalimpong News or KalimNews. Kalimpong News and KalimNews disclaim all liability for the published or posted articles, news, and information and assume no responsibility for the accuracy or validity of the content.
Kalimpong News is a non-profit online news platform managed by KalimNews and operated under the Kalimpong Press Club.
Comment Policy:
We encourage respectful and constructive discussions. Please ensure decency while commenting and register with your email ID to participate.
Note: only a member of this blog may post a comment.