Glitches in VVPATs hit bypolls, parties knock on EC’s door
Poll officials blame heat, panel denies malfunctioning
NEW DELHI: Snags in paper trail machines (Voter Verified Paper Audit Trail machines or VVPATs) plagued bypolls held on Monday in several Lok Sabha and assembly constituencies even as political parties across the spectrum raised the bogey of the large-scale tampering of Electronic Voting Machines (EVMs).
In Monday’s bypolls, VVPAT machines were used in all booths. The glitches were predominantly reported in the paper trail machines.
The Election Commission said 96 balloting units and 84 control units of EVMs and 1,202 VVPATs had to be replaced. During the polling process, the control unit of an EVM remains with the presiding officer, while the balloting unit is placed inside the voting compartment.
The poll panel dismissed reports of large-scale malfunctioning as “exaggerated”, although one EC official who asked not to be identified said VVPAT machines were liable to malfunction when placed in direct sunlight. In all, bypolls were held in nine assembly and four Lok Sabha constituencies across 10 states on Monday. The votes will be counted on May 31.
Delegations from both the Bharatiya Janata Party (BJP) and the opposition parties met the EC in Delhi to register their complaints. The maximum number of complaints came from the Kairana Lok Sabha constituency in Uttar Pradesh, where the BJP is slugging it out with the Rashtriya Lok Dal (RLD) candidate supported by almost the entire Opposition.
The RLD candidate, Tabassum Hasan, alleged that EVMs and VVPATs were not working in many booths. She also submitted a constituency-wise list of over 150 faulty EVMs to the EC.
“Voters are being denied their rights but nobody is listening to our complaints,” she said. “Most of the complaints of technical glitches are coming from Dalitand Muslim-dominated areas. The BJP leaders are adopting every tactic to stop my victory but people will foil their plans,” she alleged.
The BJP’s in-charge for the Kairana election, Devendra Singh, filed a complaint with the EC and claimed that EVMs at over 100 booths in areas dominated by BJP supporters were faulty. The SP spokesperson Rajendra Chaudhary claimed 140 EVMs were tampered in the Noorpur assembly constituency and that similar reports had come in from Kairana.
The EC official mentioned in the first instance admitted that 355 VVPAT machines in Kairana and 40 in Noorpur were replaced.
Complaints against EVMs have gathered steam over the past few years, although there is no proof they machines can be compromised. To address such concerns, the EC mandated the use of VVPAT machines in all bypolls. Ironically, this seems to have been the main cause of the problems experienced on Monday. “Most of the cases of the failure of the machines were related to the VVPAT, which were being used for the first time in Maharashtra. Since the EC had issued guidelines to compulsorily use the VVPAT, we could not use the units with malfunctioning VVPATs. About 20% VVPATs were kept on standby in all the polling stations in the two constituencies,” said an official from the Maharashtra state EC. According to this person, 277 VVPATs in Palghar LS seat and 295 in Bhan- dra-Gondia developed snags.
Like EVMs, VVPATs are made by state-owned Bharat Electronics Ltd and Electronics Corp of India Ltd. Ashish Kansal, senior DGM (communications) of Bharat Electronics Limited, said: “All the machines that are supplied to the EC are rigorously tested to work under varying conditions. There are no design flaws in the machine. Only EC can explain if and how any of these units have failed. We ensure complete quality testing before the machines are delivered to EC.”
In Nagaland, where bypolls to the its lone Lok Sabha constituency were held, a mob entered a polling station in Kubza, destroyed the EVM and assaulted officials hours after a VVPAT machine stopped functioning.
A former CEC, speaking on condition of anonymity, said the EC will have to examine the reason for the snags. “There could be various reasons for malfunctioning, these are after all machines. Besides, the commission always keeps provision for extra machines to meet exigencies.”
The first EC official referred to what he termed a “contrast error” in VVPAT machines.
In Uttar Pradesh, complaints of technical glitches started pouring in soon after polling began in Kairana and Noorpur at 7am. Additional district magistrate, Shamli, Kunwar Bahadur Singh, said VVPATs attached to EVMs developed snags as they were heat-sensitive.