Muslims the target? Fury as millions lose voting rights in India’s Bengal (Al Jazeera)

The key eastern state heads to polls this month under the shadow of a controversial revision of electoral rolls, which many say excludes Muslims disproportionately.

By Ritwika Mitra

West Bengal, India – Nabijan Mondal, 73, has voted in every Indian election – national, state or local – for the past 50 years.

Suddenly, she finds her name missing from the list of voters published by the Election Commission of India (ECI) in her home state of West Bengal as it heads for a two-phase assembly election on April 23 and April 29, with votes to be counted on May 4.

In the run-up to the election, the ECI this month revised its electoral rolls through special intensive revision (SIR), a controversial exercise India’s election authorities have conducted in more than a dozen states and federally-governed territories so far.

Nabijan’s husband, three sons and a daughter, as well as their spouses, all made it to the final list. But she did not.

The reason: all these years, Nabijan and her family had not paid much attention to the fact that she went by “Nabijan”, her nickname, on the voter card, and “Nabirul” on other government documents, including her biometric ID (Aadhaar) and ration cards.

This story was originally published in aljazeera.com. Read the full story here.

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