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The HinduApril 7, 2026

Illogical acts: On SIR adjudication, Malda gherao

The gherao of seven judicial officers in Malda on April 1 by a mob marks a disturbing escalation in what has been a fevered election season in West Bengal. The Supreme Court of India condemned it as a “calculated” attempt to disrupt the adjudication process. The ECI has referred the probe to the National Investigation Agency, and the incident has become a flashpoint in the confrontation between the

Trinamool Congress (TMC)

-led State government and the ECI over the

Special Intensive Revision exercise and its aftermath. Election-related violence has largely become a thing of the past in most States, but not in West Bengal, where violence is endemic during any election. This is partly due to the intensity of political contestation. During the era of Left Front dominance, elections were battlegrounds for “area dominance” between the Left and the TMC. The State pioneered panchayati institutions in India, which led to significant politicisation at even the local level. With a largely rural economy and little industrialisation, electoral contests were also about who controlled the power to distribute patronage. Today, the Left Front is a shell of its former self and the polity is dominated by contests between the TMC and the BJP; the TMC using what some academics term a “franchise model of politics,”, leveraging the charisma of Chief Minister Mamata Banerjee to foster a patronage system with local satraps, and the BJP seeking to import a similar model but with a Hindutva emphasis. This new political contest has brought its own forms of violence.

This year, the contest has been complicated by the SIR. The process has dragged on even after the revised roll, with 7.04 crore electors, down from 7.6 crore in 2024, was released. Close to 60 lakh electors are still being parsed for “logical discrepancies” with roughly 40% of adjudicated cases resulting in rejections. Judicial officers, working under the Court’s oversight, have been clearing this backlog — an exercise that would never have reached this stage had the ECI not relied on flawed software to filter enumeration requests. The Court has allowed appellate tribunals for persons whose names have been rejected, but there is uncertainty over whether these will conclude before polling. With tempers running high over what appears to be significant disenfranchisement — electors and political leaders in affected areas allege that the deletions have disproportionately hit the minority Muslim community — the resort to illegal methods of protest such as the Malda gherao has vitiated the election process. A more electorate-friendly approach to the SIR by the ECI, along with effective interventions by the Court, could have avoided much of the public anger. West Bengal’s political leaders must tamp down the rhetoric, not inflame it.

Key GK Takeaways for CLAT
  • 1The Malda gherao highlights severe friction between the Election Commission of India and the West Bengal government over the Special Intensive Revision (SIR). This conflict challenges the ECI's constitutional mandate under Article 324 to ensure free and fair elections. The incident, now under NIA probe, underscores how procedural failures in electoral roll management can escalate into major governance and public order crises during sensitive election periods.
  • 2From a legal standpoint, the gherao of judicial officers is a grave offense constituting wrongful confinement under the Bharatiya Nyaya Sanhita (BNS) and a direct assault on judicial independence. This event also brings into focus the potential violation of the constitutional right to vote, implicitly protected under Article 326, as the flawed SIR process threatens to unjustly disenfranchise a large number of citizens before the polls.
  • 3The electoral conflict has significant social implications, as the Special Intensive Revision (SIR) allegedly disenfranchises the minority Muslim community disproportionately, fueling social tensions. This situation is exacerbated by West Bengal's political economy, where electoral contests for control over patronage systems in a largely rural economy often lead to endemic violence. Such targeted disenfranchisement can severely damage the state's social fabric and democratic ethos.
  • 4The crisis reveals the critical risk of deploying unaudited technology in core democratic functions. The ECI's reliance on 'flawed software' for the Special Intensive Revision (SIR) directly caused massive data discrepancies, leading to potential disenfranchisement and public anger. This incident serves as a crucial case study on the necessity for robust, transparent, and user-vetted technological solutions in election management to uphold electoral integrity and prevent systemic failures.