Zürcher Nachrichten - India's Election Commission under fire from opposition

EUR -
AED 4.349376
AFN 74.009341
ALL 96.211875
AMD 446.222001
ANG 2.119303
AOA 1085.861854
ARS 1650.096307
AUD 1.675635
AWG 2.132943
AZN 2.016574
BAM 1.957604
BBD 2.384886
BDT 144.702128
BGN 1.951054
BHD 0.446383
BIF 3510.993614
BMD 1.184146
BND 1.496103
BOB 8.199899
BRL 6.1847
BSD 1.184086
BTN 107.347299
BWP 15.62541
BYN 3.374839
BYR 23209.266383
BZD 2.381474
CAD 1.616141
CDF 2670.2495
CHF 0.913101
CLF 0.025982
CLP 1025.920579
CNY 8.180852
CNH 8.154605
COP 4333.78579
CRC 569.395873
CUC 1.184146
CUP 31.379875
CVE 110.596856
CZK 24.280088
DJF 210.446437
DKK 7.471146
DOP 73.26908
DZD 153.689301
EGP 55.533856
ERN 17.762194
ETB 183.783195
FJD 2.619295
FKP 0.868835
GBP 0.874172
GEL 3.161591
GGP 0.868835
GHS 13.055221
GIP 0.868835
GMD 87.033104
GNF 10393.846061
GTQ 9.082331
GYD 247.739935
HKD 9.254914
HNL 31.391447
HRK 7.537204
HTG 155.184349
HUF 378.152342
IDR 19942.206896
ILS 3.672209
IMP 0.868835
INR 107.336048
IQD 1551.823653
IRR 49882.160717
ISK 145.034386
JEP 0.868835
JMD 184.79874
JOD 0.839526
JPY 181.705462
KES 152.754616
KGS 103.553687
KHR 4763.820132
KMF 493.788919
KPW 1065.667177
KRW 1709.658372
KWD 0.362929
KYD 0.986847
KZT 581.183869
LAK 25382.175067
LBP 106040.296132
LKR 366.384546
LRD 219.935215
LSL 19.052903
LTL 3.496476
LVL 0.716279
LYD 7.440492
MAD 10.817152
MDL 20.153296
MGA 5204.323095
MKD 61.670324
MMK 2486.738489
MNT 4226.645493
MOP 9.534164
MRU 47.341934
MUR 54.399414
MVR 18.241769
MWK 2056.861643
MXN 20.299304
MYR 4.612963
MZN 75.6654
NAD 19.052842
NGN 1598.893079
NIO 43.469878
NOK 11.321983
NPR 171.76056
NZD 1.962764
OMR 0.455302
PAB 1.184131
PEN 3.961563
PGK 5.083539
PHP 68.512927
PKR 331.027839
PLN 4.220327
PYG 7740.132881
QAR 4.311708
RON 5.096324
RSD 117.378505
RUB 90.407641
RWF 1724.709004
SAR 4.440992
SBD 9.526673
SCR 17.383571
SDG 712.265735
SEK 10.648133
SGD 1.496166
SHP 0.888416
SLE 28.952512
SLL 24830.953895
SOS 676.74038
SRD 44.643527
STD 24509.43647
STN 24.748657
SVC 10.361505
SYP 13096.154072
SZL 18.874962
THB 37.087843
TJS 11.201945
TMT 4.144512
TND 3.386065
TOP 2.85114
TRY 51.781413
TTD 8.029993
TWD 37.213009
TZS 3069.864789
UAH 51.242206
UGX 4185.48598
USD 1.184146
UYU 46.010652
UZS 14387.37724
VES 468.770271
VND 30752.277958
VUV 141.018292
WST 3.202996
XAF 656.528755
XAG 0.016226
XAU 0.000243
XCD 3.200215
XCG 2.134086
XDR 0.815591
XOF 654.832889
XPF 119.331742
YER 282.241158
ZAR 19.003072
ZMK 10658.736066
ZMW 21.899424
ZWL 381.294607
  • BCC

    -0.4400

    86.06

    -0.51%

  • NGG

    0.2890

    92.689

    +0.31%

  • BTI

    -0.7700

    58.73

    -1.31%

  • GSK

    1.7450

    60.675

    +2.88%

  • RIO

    -2.0500

    96.02

    -2.13%

  • BCE

    -0.0200

    25.69

    -0.08%

  • BP

    -0.1950

    37.465

    -0.52%

  • RYCEF

    0.4100

    17.51

    +2.34%

  • CMSD

    -0.0100

    23.63

    -0.04%

  • JRI

    -0.0400

    13.2

    -0.3%

  • RELX

    -0.8700

    30.19

    -2.88%

  • VOD

    0.0600

    15.63

    +0.38%

  • AZN

    4.1900

    209.74

    +2%

  • RBGPF

    0.1000

    82.5

    +0.12%

  • CMSC

    -0.0740

    23.701

    -0.31%

India's Election Commission under fire from opposition
India's Election Commission under fire from opposition / Photo: Indranil MUKHERJEE - AFP/File

India's Election Commission under fire from opposition

The Election Commission of India, long regarded as the impartial guardian of the world's largest democracy, is facing unprecedented scrutiny over its credibility and independence.

Text size:

Opposition leaders and critics have alleged that large-scale rigging of elections is impacting the overall results of the vote.

The ECI has denied all charges, the first against it in India's history.

Heading the charge is the leader of the opposition in New Delhi's parliament, Rahul Gandhi of the Congress party, who previously alleged that India's electronic voting machines are flawed.

Now Gandhi has accused the ECI of refusing to share digital voter records, detailing what he said was a list of errors after his supporters spent weeks combing through vast piles of registration lists by hand.

- What are the allegations? -

Gandhi, 55, said his party lost dozens of seats in the 2024 parliamentary elections because of vote rigging.

The largest democratic exercise in human history across the country of 1.4 billion people was staggered over six weeks.

Gandhi claimed that the ECI manipulated voter rolls to favour Prime Minister Narendra Modi's Bharatiya Janata Party (BJP).

Modi, 74, won a historic third term last year but fell short of a majority.

The alleged rigging involved a string of tactics, according to Gandhi.

He said some people voted multiple times, citing bulk registrations from one dwelling and seemingly bogus addresses.

In a presentation to reporters on August 7, Gandhi pointed to a parliamentary constituency his party narrowly lost as an "open and shut" example of the alleged irregularities.

Over 100,000 "fake" votes were cast in the constituency, he said, courtesy of duplicate voters.

His Congress party lost the seat by just over 30,000 votes.

"Our demand from the ECI is clear -- be transparent and release digital voter rolls so that people and parties can audit them," Gandhi said.

- What has the Election Commission said? -

The ECI has called Gandhi's accusation "false and misleading".

India's chief election commissioner said they would "never" back down from their constitutional duties.

"Politics is being done using the Election Commission... as a tool to target India's voters," Gyanesh Kumar told a news conference this month.

"The Election Commission wants to make it clear that it fearlessly stands rock-solid with all voters... without any discrimination and will continue to do so."

Kumar also said those alleging fraud either need to furnish proof under oath or apologise.

"An affidavit must be submitted or an apology to the nation must be made -- there is no third option."

- Why now? -

Gandhi launched a month-long "voter rights" rally in the key battleground state of Bihar on August 17, receiving enthusiastic public response.

The allegations come ahead of elections in Bihar in October or November.

The opposition alleged the ECI had embarked on a "mass disenfranchisement" exercise, after it gave voters in the state just weeks to prove their citizenship, requiring documents that few possess in a registration revamp.

India's top court stepped in last week, allowing a biometric ID most residents possess to be accepted in Bihar's voter registration.

The "Special Intensive Revision" (SIR) of voter registration is set to be replicated across India.

Gandhi called the exercise in Bihar the "final conspiracy".

Activists have reported finding numerous living voters declared dead by election officials, and entire families struck off draft lists.

Voter verification in Bihar is scheduled to be completed by September 25, with the final list released five days later.

"They aim to steal the elections by adding new voters under the guise of SIR and removing existing voters," Gandhi said.

The ECI has defended the registration revision, saying it is in part to avoid "foreign illegal immigrants" from voting.

Members of Modi's BJP have long claimed that large numbers of undocumented Muslim migrants from neighbouring Bangladesh have fraudulently entered India's electoral rolls.

Criticism mounted after the ECI replaced Bihar's machine-readable voter records with scanned image files that do not allow text searches.

Critics said the changes made detecting anomalies more time-consuming and prone to error.

G.Kuhn--NZN