People's Democracy(Weekly Organ of the Communist Party of India (Marxist) |
Vol. XXXVI
No. 40 October 07, 2012 |
CPI(M)
Objects to Undermining
of
Election Commission’s Authority
THE
CPI(M) has sought an urgent inquiry by the Election Commission
of India into
the sabotage of the process of summary revision of electoral
rolls in
CPI(M)
central secretariat member Nilotpal Basu wrote a letter to the
Chief Election
Commissioner on October 4 bringing to his notice this
development and seeking
inquiry into it. As proof, the CPI(M) leader attached a copy
of the letter
issued by District Magistrate and District Electoral Officer
of Malda, dated
September 28, 2012 to the CPI(M) informing that ‘all
administrative works in
relation to the summary revision of electoral rolls 2013 have
been stopped for
the time being’.
Basu
said that this process of revision of electoral rolls is
important for ensuring
the voting rights of hundreds of thousands of young people,
which would
otherwise be kept in abeyance. Commending the ECI for
responding favourably to
its request for continuing the revision process, the CPI(M)
leader however drew
attention to the apprehensions about the state government
sabotaging this
process.
On the
letter issued by DM Malda, Basu stated “The content of the
letter is
self-revealing; it undermines the authority of the EC. The
severe ramification
of this can be overlooked at our peril. The superintendence
and control of the
EC over every aspect of the electoral process is the bedrock
of our
parliamentary democracy. Under no circumstance, can it be
allowed to be
compromised.”
Basu
felt that such instructions could not have been issued without
the behest of
the Chief Electoral Officer of the state. He, therefore,
requested the CEC to
initiate an urgent inquiry to fix accountability for this
gross misdemeanor.
‘Unless those who are responsible for this wrongdoing are
brought to book,
public confidence in the electoral establishment of the state
will remain under
a cloud. And so will be the credibility of the system’, he
felt.
(