Lack of receipts, AI-induced errors: Mamata Banerjee writes to CEC again to highlight issues with SIR in Bengal
In her letter to CEC Gyanesh Kumar regarding the SIR, Mamata Banerjee alleged that the ECI is disregarding established procedures and requiring voters to repeatedly prove their eligibility.
3 min readKolkataUpdated: Jan 12, 2026 08:05 PM IST
West Bengal Chief Minister Mamata Banerjee leads a protest rally against the Enforcement Directorate (ED) raid on the IPAC office, in Kolkata. (ANI File Photo)
Flagging the “mechanical” SIR process “using Artificial Intelligence (AI)”, West Bengal Chief Minister Mamata Banerjee on Monday, in a fresh letter to Chief Election Commissioner (CEC) Gyanesh Kumar, accused the poll panel of disowning its own previous mechanisms, and added that its current approach “is arbitrary, illogical and contrary to the letter and spirit of the Constitution”.
In her third letter to the CEC, since the Election Commission began the Special Intensive Revision (SIR) of electoral rolls in poll-bound West Bengal, the chief minister said the aim of the ongoing exercise seemed to be “neither correction nor inclusion… but solely of deletion and of exclusion” of voters.
Referring to the ongoing hearings in the second phase of the SIR in the state, the chief minister said the process was “mechanical and driven by technicalities rather than a reasoned application of mind”.
“Such administrative lapses are being unfairly forced upon citizens, causing severe harassment of common citizens and also resulting in the denial of their constitutional rights. This defeats the very objective of the Special Intensive Revision (SIR), which is intended to strengthen and purify the electoral rolls, not to exclude genuine and eligible voters,” she wrote.
She also said that the absence of proper acknowledgment or receipt being issued for the documents submitted is creating a problem for electors. “The non-issuance of documentary acknowledgment deprives electors of proof of submission and places them at the mercy of internal record-keeping deficiencies,” she wrote.
She said that using AI tools for the digitisation of the manual voter lists of 2002 has led to serious errors in electors’ details, leading to many genuine voters being categorised as “logical discrepancies.”
She also accused the Election Commission of disregarding its own statutory processes that were followed consistently over two decades and wrote: “Why should the process revert to 2002? Does this imply that all revisions carried out over the intervening years were illegal?”
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The TMC chief also condemned “harassment” of eminent citizens, noting that Nobel Laureate Prof Amartya Sen, poet Joy Goswami, actor and MP Deepak Adhikari, international cricketer Mohammed Shami, and the Maharaj of Bharat Sevashram Sangha were “subjected to this unplanned, insensitive and inhuman process.” “Does this not amount to sheer audacity on the part of the EC?” she asked.
The chief minister further criticised the treatment of women voters, saying, “Women electors who have shifted to their matrimonial homes and changed their surnames after marriage are being questioned and summoned for hearings to prove their identity.
“This not only reflects a complete lack of social sensitivity but also constitutes a grave insult to women and genuine voters. Is this how a constitutional authority treats half of the electorate?” The chief minister urged the EC to immediately address the issues to “end the harassment and agony of the citizens and the official machinery” and safeguard democratic rights.
Atri Mitra is a highly accomplished Special Correspondent for The Indian Express, bringing over 20 years of experience to his reporting. His work is characterized by deep regional knowledge and a focus on critical administrative and political developments, establishing strong Expertise and Authority in his domain.
Experience
Current Role: Special Correspondent, The Indian Express.
Decades of Experience: Over two decades of extensive reporting experience, primarily covering administration and political news.
Geographical Focus: Holds significant reporting experience from West Bengal, Bihar, and the North-East, providing a comprehensive understanding of the socio-political landscape in these regions.
Key Coverage: Has dedicated more than ten years to covering administration and political news, with a keen focus on political developments in West Bengal.
Electoral Reporting: Demonstrated a commitment to crucial political moments, having covered the 2009 Lok Sabha election and 2010 assembly elections during his time at Anandabazar Patrika, and the 2019 Bihar Lok Sabha election while working with News18-Bangla.
Career Foundation: Began his career at the leading vernacular daily Anandabazar Patrika, where he worked for more than fifteen years, including a three-year stint as the Bihar correspondent.
Education
Advanced Degree: Holds a Master's degree in Economics from Rabindrabharati University, providing an analytical framework for his political and administrative reporting.
Undergraduate Education: Holds a Bachelor's degree from Calcutta University.
Prestigious Alumni: His educational background includes attending esteemed institutions: he is an alumnus of St. Xavier's, Kolkata and Ramakrishna Mission Asrama, Narendrapur.
Atri Mitra's decades of dedicated reporting, substantial focus on political and administrative beats, and solid academic credentials make him a trusted and authoritative source for news and analysis from Eastern and North-Eastern India. ... Read More