At the end of the 80’s and 90s, the Jehanabad district in Bihar was infamous as the “blazing field” of the central Bihar, with hundreds killed in the caste and the biggest Indian escape in India, which occurred in November 2005.
Elections of Bihar Assembly: Complete Coverage
After the publication of the election roles 1. August after a special intensive revision (Sir) of more than a hundred voters from the minority community in Jafarganj in Jehanabad, their names were missing. Since then, this problem has become a key point in discussion among the inhabitants of the area, many of whom are poor marginal workers.
One such inhabitant is Ladli Khatun, 42, (Epic No. RRS1130707), who claimed that her name was omitted from the list of proposals. “I was born in 1983 and I had been doing my franchise for a long time, but this time I couldn’t find my name in the voters’ list. How will I vote in the upcoming elections to the Assembly?” She said and stood before her home, which was lined between the ugly concrete structures in a narrow, dirty -set face on the face with disconnected walls and harsh roofs. Light without rain without rain barely reaches the sidewalks that depict stays.
The garbage along with human and animals was upset through the locality and the inhabitants lost barefoot with voters in hand in hand and were looking for an official to explore their name, whether online or on the list
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“I do not remember exactly which I voted on in earlier elections, except that I went to the local school to leave where various stalls were camping in various rooms,” added Mrs. Khatun because her ten -year -old son stood next to her in the Green Eid Attire. Her epic card lists her husband as Mohd. Sallaudadin and her father as Mohd. Zarin Sah.
“All four Jafarganj election cabins are camped at the Nav Sriit Elementary School,” said Sarfaraj Alam, 65, resident and social activist.
Similarly Mohd. Faiyaz Alam, 43 years, an occasional worker from Jafarganje, was also unable to find his name in the role design. “I have been using my franchise since 2010 in a local government school with this voter card, which bears Epic no. Kallla Alam. “My father was an occasional painter, and I am, but why did they delete my name from the list? What should I do? Will I not vote this time?” Why? “He asked and was wrong with this correspondent with the election commission official.
Since the publication of role proposals, several inhabitants in Jafarganja have been seen who carried their voter identification cards and look for their names online or in printed copies. In a temporary road structure, a group of five inhabitants sat with copies of roles and epic cards in hand and discussed possible reasons for Deleors, and how to reopen their names.
“It is a thoughtful design that will remove the name of most Muslim and extremely backward voters from the list. Everyone knows it (political design),” said one of the inhabitants who refused to share their name. “What do you do by knowing my name?” He said with a Puckish smile when others laughed and returned to scan the list of designs.
The district judge Alankrita Pandey and the representative of the election director (DY. EO) poonam Kumari said Hindu that the inhabitants do not have to panic. “They can add their names via Form 6,” Mrs. Pandey said. “We will arrange special camps there, which include the names of real voters in the list, and before this exercise we will have residents of special camps through the microphone announcement,” Mrs. Kumari added.
Local Rashtriya Janata gave Mla Suday Yadav, also known as Kumar Krishna Mohan, was to visit the locality on Tuesday to meet the “unruly” inhabitants. “I’m going there (Jafarganj locality) to meet these residents. Is it strange how such a large number of voters have been deleted from a relaxed list of designs from a particular area where the maximum residents come from the Muslim community?” He said while he was sitting at the road stand in front of the district collector. Mr. Yadav defeated Janata’s candidate Dal (United) Krishna Nandan Prasad Verma in the elections to the Assembly of 2020.
Meanwhile, the Indian Communist Party (Marxist-Leninska), another opposition party, carried out a preliminary survey in the locality. “Out of the total of 157 voters of four election cabins in Jafarganj in the city, up to 130 are from the Muslim community and 27 of other Hindu caste,” said Ramadhar Singh, district secretary of the party.
According to the latest electoral proposals in Bihar, the cost of 7.24 voters is to be more than 56 lamps less than the roles prepared in January 2025. In the Jehanabad district, there are only that 53,089 names (6.4%) were not found in the role of released 1 August. Condition or are non -following.
Published – 6. August 2025 22:53