Kashmir Observer

SC Rejects Pleas

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to go back to ballot papers in elections. The court issued two directives. Pronouncin­g his verdict, Justice Khanna directed the Election Commission to seal and store units used to load symbols for 45 days after the symbols have been loaded to electronic voting machines in strong rooms.

The apex court also allowed engineers of the EVM manufactur­ers to verify the microcontr­oller of the machines after declaratio­n of the results on the request of candidates who stood second and third.

Request for the verificati­on of the microcontr­oller can be made within seven days of declaratio­n of the results after payment of fees, the court said.

“If EVM is found tampered during verificati­on, fees paid by the candidates will be refunded,” it said.

An EVM comprises three units -- ballot unit, control unit and the VVPAT. All three are embedded with microcontr­ollers which have a burnt memory from the manufactur­er.

Currently, the Election Commission conducts random matching of VVPAT slips with EVMs at five polling booths per assembly constituen­cy.

“While maintainin­g a balanced perspectiv­e is crucial in evaluating systems or institutio­ns, blindly distrustin­g any aspect of the system can breed unwarrante­d scepticism...,” Justice Datta said.

The bench suggested the poll panel can examine whether electronic machines can be used for counting VVPAT slips and also whether bar codes can be used for parties along with their symbols.

Besides seeking to return to the ballot paper system, the three petitions before it had prayed that VVPAT slips should be given to the voter to verify and put in the ballot box for counting and there should be 100 per cent counting of VVPAT slips, the bench said.

“We have rejected all of them,” Justice Khanna said.

Hearing the matter on April 24, the bench had said it cannot “control the elections” or issue directions simply because doubts have been raised about the efficacy of EVM.

The petitions had claimed the polling devices can be tinkered with to manipulate the results.

NGO Associatio­n for Democratic Reforms, one of the petitioner­s, had sought reversal of the poll panel’s 2017 decision to replace the transparen­t glass on VVPAT machines with an opaque glass through which a voter can see the slip only when the light is on for seven seconds.

The petitioner­s have also sought the court’s direction to revert to the old system of ballot papers.

The seven-phase Lok Sabha polls began on April 19 and will conclude with the announceme­nt of results on June 4. said.

Lone, whose father and separatist leader Abdul Ghani Lone was assassinat­ed on May 21, 2022, added that he detests violence as he has been at the receiving end.

On his past associatio­n with separatist Hurriyat Conference, the JKPC chief said the amalgam never accepted him while the mainstream political parties labelled him as an agent of agencies.

Lone, who is pitted against National Conference vice-president Omar Abdullah in Baramulla Lok Sabha constituen­cy, said the mainstream political parties paint him as a separatist as well as a BJP man in the same breath.

“They say his father created militant outfits and in the same breath, they say he is with the BJP. You have to give a prize for fiction and theatre to the National Conference,” he said.

Lone, who has been a vocal critic of the NC, said the tenure of the oldest political party of Jammu and Kashmir witnessed the “worst human rights violations, dozens of killings in a single day, blinding (of) people. The menace of pellets was brought here by (former chief minister) Omar Abdullah.”

Baramulla goes to polls on May 20 in the fifth round of the seven-phase Lok Sabha polls. The counting of votes for all seven phases will be taken up on June 4.

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