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This is an archive article published on May 26, 2024

Names missing from polling booths, several voters head back home disappointed

JNU professor Ayesha Kidwai was among those unable to vote.

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On polling day, several people were out of Delhi for two reasons — the heat and the summer holidays. Others in the city went to exercise their franchise — and many returned home without an inked finger as their names were missing from the voter list.

JNU professor Ayesha Kidwai was among those unable to vote. “I have voted at the same booth for the last 30 years. My husband and I went to the booth-level office for voters’ slip but it showed my name had been deleted, though my husband’s name was still there… Why was I not informed of this?” she questioned.

Delhi Panchayat Union Chief, Than Singh Yadav said, “I live in Nangloi Saidan village. People who have been casting their votes for years have either had their votes cancelled, transferred or declared to be absent — I had a first-hand experience of this today, so did many others in my village.”

Hari Prakash Yadav, 69, from Madipur Pocket 2, said he found his name deleted after he reached his polling booth at 12 pm. “… my daughter reached the booth at 3 pm and she was told her name was deleted,” he said.

Meanwhile, the mother of women’s rights advocate Vrinda Grover said her name was missing from the voting list. “Today is voting day, I am almost 89… this might be my last chance to vote… I had not received any number slip and was told I would get it at the polling center at DAV school. It is a 5-minute walk from my house for a normal person who can walk, I cannot,” Pushpa Grover said.

She said despite making multiple attempts to rectify the issue, she was repeatedly told her name was not on the list. Vrinda Grover, also a member of Ukraine Commission of Inquiry, said she plans to file a lawsuit.

Meanwhile, some voters also complained about barricading at polling booths.

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East Delhi AAP candidate Kuldeep Kumar also posted a video on X and alleged the Delhi Police was “stopping” people from voting by barricading the middle of the road in Khajuri road, Joga Bai Extension. A senior police officer looking after arrangements said, “We are not checking anyone physically and barricading is part of protocol… everywhere, barricading was outside polling centres at a distance of 100m-200m… We are just checking their phones and voter Ids.”

Saman Husain is a Correspondent at The Indian Express. Based in New Delhi, she is an emerging voice in political journalism, reporting on civic governance, elections, migration, and the social consequences of policy, with a focus on ground-reporting across Delhi-NCR and western Uttar Pradesh. Professional Profile Education: She holds a Bachelor’s degree in Political Science (Honours) from Kirori Mal College, University of Delhi, and is an alumna of the Asian College of Journalism (ACJ), Chennai. Core Beats: Her reporting focuses on the national capital’s governance and politics. She specializes in Delhi’s civic administration and the city units of the BJP, AAP and Congress. In western Uttar Pradesh, she mostly reports on crime. Specialization: She has a keen interest in electoral processes and politics — her recent contributions include work on electoral roll revisions. Recent Notable Articles (since July 2025) Her recent work reflects a strong show-not-tell approach to storytelling, combining narrative reporting with political and historical context: 1. Politics: “On the banks of the Yamuna, a political tussle for Purvanchali support” (October 6): A report on how migration histories shaped electoral strategies in Delhi before the Bihar elections. “Explained: How Delhi’s natural drainage vanished gradually over the centuries” (September 29): An explanatory piece tracing the historical reasons that eventually led to the erosion of Delhi’s rivers and its impact on perrenial flooding. 2. Longforms “Four weddings, three funerals: How a Uttar Pradesh man swindled insurance companies” (October 7): A long-read reconstructing a chilling fraud by a man who killed three of his family members, including both his parents for insurance proceeds. His fourth wife discovered his fraud… “How Ghaziabad conman operated fake embassy of a country that doesn’t exist — for 9 years” (July 27) : A story on bizarre fraud operation and the institutional blind spots that enabled it. 3. Crime and Justice: “He was 8 when his father was killed. Fifteen years later, in UP’s Shamli, he took revenge” (October 18): A deeply reported crime story tracing cycles of violence, memory and justice in rural Uttar Pradesh. “Who killed 19 girls in Nithari? With the SC rejecting appeals, there are no answers and no closure” (July 31): A report capturing the long legal and emotional aftermath of one of India’s most chilling unsolved criminal cases. 4. Policy Impact “At Manthan, over US tariffs, Delhi-NCR’s apparel industry brainstorms solutions” (September 8) and “Trump’s 50% tariff begins to bite: Agra’s leather belt feels the impact” (August 13) : Reports documenting how global trade decisions ripple through local industries, workers and exporters. Signature Style Saman is recognized for her grassroots storytelling. Her articles often focus on the "people behind the policy". She is particularly skilled at taking mundane administrative processes and turning them into compelling human narratives. X (Twitter): @SamanHusain9 ... Read More

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