Millennium Post

EC to provide satisfacto­ry solution to parties’ concerns on EVMS: CEC

- OUR CORRESPOND­ENT

NEW DELHI: India’s Election Commission said on Monday it would provide “satisfacto­ry solution” to the concerns raised by political parties on the reliabilit­y of electronic voting machines (EVMS), after several of them pitched for returning to the ballot paper system at an all-party meeting.

Briefing reporters after the meeting, Chief Election Commission­er OP Rawat said, “We will definitely look into all the suggestion­s given by them (political parties) and there will be a satisfacto­ry solution to them.”

The Election Commission convened the meeting ahead of elections to several state assemblies later this year and the Lok Sabha polls scheduled for early next year.

It is customary for the poll panel to listen to political parties ahead of elections.

In the meeting, several opposition parties raised the issues of EVM tampering and technical glitches in the voter verifiable paper audit trail (VVPAT) system.

Representa­tives of the Congress, Samajwadi Party, Bahujan Samaj Party and the Trinamool Congress were among those who raised these issues and many of them also suggested going back to the ballot paper system, representa­tives of parties and EC officials present in the meeting said. Though EVM tampering and VVPAT glitches were not on the agenda, the parties raised these issues.

Some parties also suggested that the number of constituen­cies where results of EVM and paper audit trail device are matched be increased to enhance the confidence of voters and parties in the reliabilit­y of the voting mode.

“Nothing final has been decided yet, but one way to allay fears is to increase the number of constituen­cies where EVM and paper trail machine results are matched,” a senior EC functionar­y said after the meeting.

Responding to repeated questions on EVMS, Rawat said the EC takes a comprehens­ive view.

“Some of the parties said going back to ballot is really bad as it will bring back booth capturing... we don’t want (that). At the same time, some parties said there are problems with EVMS, there are issues with VVPAT slip count so why not EC takes a call on this,” Rawat said.

Asked about the stand of the EC on EVMS and whether it remains the “same” as it was in the past, the Chief Election Commission­er dubbed it as a “hypothetic­al question”.

In June last year, when the EC had invited parties to prove that the EVMS can be hacked, only two parties accepted the challenge but they too opted out of the event.

As many as 13 parties had last year questioned the reliabilit­y of the EVMS.

Then Chief Election Commission­er Nasim Zaidi had maintained that the EVMS used by the EC were “non-tamperable” and with 100 per cent use of paper trail machines in all future elections the issue of tamperabil­ity of the machines “stands closed”.

The “failure rate” of EVMS in most elections has been 0.7 per cent.

EVMS were first used in election in India in May, 1982 in a Kerala byoll.

But since there was no law prescribin­g its use, the Supreme Court struck down the election.

The Representa­tion of the People Act was amended in 1989 to allow use of EVMS. But a general consensus on its use was evolved only in 1998.

Over 11 per cent of the 10,300 VVPAT machines across 10 states had developed faults and had to be replaced during the bypolls on May 28 this year.

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