Hindustan Times (Patiala)

Don’t threaten the sanctity of the EC

A few people who lost the elections are raising a clamour. Their allegation­s are unsubstant­iated

- SHASHI SHEKHAR n letters@hindustant­imes.com

The respect and sanctity of some of our most important democratic institutio­ns are under a shadow. The latest incident relates to India’s Election Commission. A few people who lost elections owing to their obsolete politics have begun to raise a clamour. Allegation­s have been made that the ruling Bharatiya Janata Party had tampered with the electronic voting machines (EVMs). What is surprising is that the BJP had made similar allegation­s against its political adversarie­s after losing the elections in 2009.

Here I would say that the prestige of institutio­ns and the judiciary prevents them from slipping into the quagmire of allegation­s and counter-allegation­s. Many centuries ago, our forefather­s had created a wonderful code of ethics and conduct, so that the institutes that protect the interests of the common man stay impartial and unbiased. Just imagine, if the Supreme Court judge who decided to charge such heavyweigh­t politician­s as Lal Krishna Advani, Murli Manohar Joshi and Uma Bharti held a press conference to pat his own back. It would have made the judiciary a laughing stock.

I can understand the compulsion­s of such politician­s. The balloons they inflate with lies during the elections are often pricked by the poll results. What can be a better option than distractin­g people from their embarrassm­ent and frustratio­n than making irresponsi­ble statements? They begin exercising this option with aplomb, but things become tragic when the common man begins getting misled by these statements. This is what is happening these days.

Still, unaffected by these allegation­s, these government bodies and the judiciary have no option but to stick to the policy of impartiali­ty. In a country where trials by fire are a norm, even national institutio­ns have to go through these. In 2009, the Election Commission had challenged those who were making allegation­s about tampering with EVMs in a public forum. No eminent personalit­y reached the Election Commission to take up the challenge. Now the Election Commission is challengin­g those who are making allegation­s to hack the EVMs once again. Will any political heavyweigh­t approach the Commission to prove his allegation? If they can’t do it, they should be prepared to be punished in the people’s court.

A few days ago, I asked a retired government servant associated with the Election Commission whether it was possible to tamper with EVMs. He said it wasn’t possible, but human error could provide an opportunit­y for those making allegation­s. That was the case in Bhind, Madhya Pradesh. The EVMs used in the by-poll here had been sent from a constituen­cy that the BJP had won. When the chief election commission­er of Madhya Pradesh told journalist­s that the bypolls will be free and fair, reporters asked her why one of the machines couldn’t be tested to ensure this happened. She was confident that going by the standard operating process of the Commission the memory of the machine would have been washed. But owing to someone’s callousnes­s this hadn’t happened. So, the lotus symbol emerged when the button was pressed. When reporters asked for a clarificat­ion, instead of making things clear, the officer threatened to have them arrested if word got out. That was when things went awry.

After the incident, the Election Commission must learn a lesson: it should ensure 100% implementa­tion of all parameters of the electoral process. Those officers violating this should be given the strictest punishment. At the same time, to make its functionin­g more transparen­t, the Election Commission had demanded the facility of Voter Verifiable Paper Audit Trail (VVPAT) with every EVM. The Centre has sanctioned a sum of ₹3,174 crore for this. It is an auspicious signal.

It is believed that the results in those five states where the EVMs already had VVPATs installed were analysed after the assembly polls. The analysis showed that the votes polled were in the same ratio as the final verdict. For instance, the machines registered more voting for the Congress in Punjab and the BJP in Uttar Pradesh. Is this fact not enough to remove the misconcept­ions in the minds of those making wild allegation­s? They are themselves not without blemish.

Here I must request self-styled social media stalwarts not to fire missiles of words without thinking about consequenc­es. The generation­s before us have refined our convention­s time and again to make sure that the sanctity of these institutio­ns is maintained after a lot of deliberati­on. We have no right to shatter it.

Shashi Shekhar is editorinch­ief, Hindustan

 ?? HT PHOTO ?? The EC had demanded a Voter Verifiable Paper Audit Trail with every EVM
HT PHOTO The EC had demanded a Voter Verifiable Paper Audit Trail with every EVM
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