The Peterborough Examiner

‘A type of election that the world really hasn’t seen before’

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Parmod Chhabra is deeply invested in the Indian general election that gets underway on Friday, with almost a billion people eligible to vote, but he won’t be casting a ballot.

Nor will the vast majority of the overseas Indian community in Canada.

The reasons are simple. India requires overseas citizens to travel back to their home electorate­s to vote in person on polling day. There is no option for postal or electronic voting for the general overseas population, and people like Chhabra lose eligibilit­y because they also have foreign citizenshi­p.

“I will suggest there’s a very small number of people who are going to go back to vote,” said Chhabra, president of the India Canada Associatio­n community group in Ottawa, citing the roughly 14-hour flight from either Toronto or Vancouver and round-trip fares around $2,000.

“If it was close enough, like a three-hour or four-hour flight, I will bet you there will be hundreds of thousands of people going,” he said. “The interest level is very high, but this cost and the time which it takes to get there, that is prohibitiv­e right now.”

Indian authoritie­s say about 969 million people have registered to vote in the 44-day general election, creating a massive electorate of about 12 per cent of the global population for the biggest election in history.

“It’s simply the largest kind of exercise in voting that humanity has ever seen,” said Vina Nadjibulla, the Asia Pacific Foundation of Canada vice-president of research. “It’s a type of election that the world really hasn’t seen before.”

However, for a country with a huge overseas diaspora population, voting from overseas Indian citizens is scarce because of the inperson voting rule.

Official figures showed that of the more than 600 million votes cast in the last Indian general election in 2019, only 25,606 came from overseas voters.

Almost 100,000 out of 1.35 million eligible overseas Indian citizens had registered to vote, said University of Victoria political science professor emerita Reeta C. Tremblay.

In comparison, the Philippine­s — another democratic country with a large overseas diaspora — reported more than 432,000 overseas votes in its 2016 presidenti­al election, with close to 1.4 million registered as eligible. Registered Filipinos overseas can vote by mail or at consulates and embassies around the world.

“The traditiona­l argument against overseas voting has been that Indian citizens living outside India, who generally have insignific­ant knowledge of the domestic issues, might unduly influence the outcome of the elections,” Tremblay said in a written response to questions.

“India has begun to reconsider the inclusion of the overseas voters through different means — proxy voting, electronic voting, postal voting or voting in the diplomatic missions,” Tremblay said. “However, nothing seems to have materializ­ed for the 2024 elections.”

India Canada Organizati­on chair Naseer Mehdi Khan said there are about 25,000 temporary foreign workers from India working in the tech sector, and many were anxious to vote.

“They requested us to forward the same (concern) to the (Indian) High Commission­er,” Khan said about the desire for many Indian citizens wishing to vote without travelling to India. “We suggested they should be voting in the Indian election … People very much want to get involved, but they couldn’t.”

The election comes amid a spotlight on the Canada-India relationsh­ip, which has hit new lows recently.

Last year, Prime Minister Justin Trudeau said there was credible intelligen­ce that Indian authoritie­s were involved in the killing of Sikh community leader Hardeep Singh Nijjar in British Columbia, something India denied.

An inquiry this month into foreign interferen­ce in Canadian elections has heard allegation­s of Indian involvemen­t. India’s government has called the claims baseless.

Researcher Tremblay said overseas interest in India’s election may never have been higher, around the world with Prime Minister Narendra Modi’s administra­tion coinciding with India’s rising internatio­nal profile and economic clout.

Tremblay said the rationale that overseas voters needed more knowledge of India’s domestic issues “seems to have lost ground” in light of the global attention, and participat­ion in Indian society by the diaspora community in other ways.

“The overseas Indians contribute large remittance­s,” she said, referring to money sent home by individual­s overseas. “In 2023, India topped global remittance charts at $125 billion. Moreover, overseas Indians are also a source of funding for political parties. With Mr. Modi’s popularity with the Indian diaspora, this has taken on much greater significan­ce.”

Chhabra and Kahn echoed those sentiments.

“It’s the most important election in years in India’s developmen­t,” Khan said. “Everybody’s talking about it. What will happen after this election? Are they going to continue with whatever promises they have given?”

 ?? ANUPAM NATH THE ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? On the eve of the national election, polling officials and security personnel carry electronic voting machines and other election material off a boat after crossing the Brahmaputr­a River about
350 kilometres east of Guwahati,
India, on Thursday.
ANUPAM NATH THE ASSOCIATED PRESS On the eve of the national election, polling officials and security personnel carry electronic voting machines and other election material off a boat after crossing the Brahmaputr­a River about 350 kilometres east of Guwahati, India, on Thursday.

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