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SUN · 2026-04-12 · 23:59 GMTBRIEF NSR-2026-0413-65013
News/Political turmoil in Indian border state/Political turmoil in Indian border state as nine million los…
NSR-2026-0413-65013News Report·EN·Political Strategy

Political turmoil in Indian border state as nine million lose voting rights

In West Bengal, India, nine million voters (12% of the electorate) have been removed from the 2026 electoral rolls, sparking political turmoil. The ruling TMC party alleges the revision disproportionately affects Muslims, aiming to benefit the BJP, though both the BJP and Election Commission deny this.

BBC News - WorldFiled 2026-04-12 · 23:59 GMTLean · CenterRead · 5 min
Political turmoil in Indian border state as nine million lose voting rights
BBC News - WorldFIG 01
Reading time
5min
Word count
1 076words
Sources cited
3cited
Entities identified
10entities
Quality score
100%
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Briefing Summary

AI-generated
NEWSAR · AI

In West Bengal, India, nine million voters (12% of the electorate) have been removed from the 2026 electoral rolls, sparking political turmoil. The ruling TMC party alleges the revision disproportionately affects Muslims, aiming to benefit the BJP, though both the BJP and Election Commission deny this. The removals stem from an Election Commission AI-driven process flagging "logical discrepancies," particularly impacting 2.7 million voters linked to the 2002 roll. While the Supreme Court allowed elections to proceed, the fate of these 2.7 million remains undecided, with data suggesting a majority are Muslim. The controversy adds tension to debates over migration and voter rolls in the state, which shares a porous border with Bangladesh.

Confidence 0.90Sources 3Claims 5Entities 10
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Article analysis

Model · rule-based
Framing
Political Strategy
Human Rights
Tone
Mixed Tone
AI-assessed
CalmNeutralAlarmist
Factuality
0.70 / 1.00
Factual
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Sources cited
3
Well sourced
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Key claims

5 extracted
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Overall, Muslims account for 3.11 million - about 34% - of the nine million removed.

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West Bengal is home to India's second-largest Muslim population, accounting for roughly 14% of the country's 172 million Muslims.

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Nine million voters - about 12% of West Bengal's 76 million electorate - have been removed from the 2026 rolls

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Banerjee's party alleges the roll revision exercise has disenfranchised millions - particularly Muslims - to benefit the BJP.

factualBanerjee's party
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Constituency-wide data compiled by political parties suggests that around 65% of the 2.7 million in limbo are Muslims.

statisticpolitical parties
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Full report

5 min read · 1 076 words
The tensions have been fuelled by remarks from political leaders, including from Prime Minister Narendra Modi, who have suggested in campaign speeches that the clean-up is aimed at identifying so-called "illegal Bangladeshi infiltrators" - a term the TMC says is being used to refer to Muslims. However, many Hindu voters have also been left out from the list. India shares a 4,096km (2,545-mile) largely porous and partly riverine border with Bangladesh and a significant stretch of it runs through West Bengal. This has added a fraught political edge to debates over migration and voter rolls in the state.West Bengal is also home to India's second-largest Muslim population, accounting for roughly 14% of the country's 172 million Muslims, according to the 2011 census.NurPhoto via Getty ImagesNine million voters - about 12% of West Bengal's 76 million electorate - have been removed from the 2026 rollsHome to more than 70 million voters, the state has been governed by Chief Minister Mamata Banerjee's TMC since 2011, with Modi's Bharatiya Janata Party (BJP) as its main challenger. With the fourth-highest number of India's parliamentary seats, West Bengal remains a key prize the BJP has yet to win. In the 2021 assembly polls, it secured about a quarter of the state's 294 seats.Banerjee's party alleges the roll revision exercise has disenfranchised millions - particularly Muslims - to benefit the BJP, a charge both the party and the Election Commission deny.After repeated legal challenges, the Supreme Court allowed the Election Commission to proceed with the April polls without settling all disputes over the deletions. As a result, the fate of 2.7 million voters remains undecided.Their cases lie at the heart of the controversy. These voters had submitted enumeration forms linking them to the 2002 electoral roll - widely regarded as the last "clean" list. Yet the poll panel used a new, AI-driven process to flag what it called "logical discrepancies" in their records, treating them as doubtful voters.Despite subsequent re-verification, people like Ali were excluded. Constituency-wide data compiled by political parties suggests that around 65% of the 2.7 million in limbo are Muslims. Overall, Muslims account for 3.11 million - about 34% - of the nine million removed, significantly higher than their 27% share in West Bengal's population, according to the 2011 census.Ali and his children must now approach a tribunal set up on the Supreme Court's direction. But with the rolls frozen and elections due later this month - on 23 and 29 April - they see little chance of restoring their voting rights in time."I am dumbstruck. I feel deeply hurt and insulted. How can they conduct the elections without solving our disputes? I simply have no idea who to seek justice from," Ali told the BBC.Elections are due in West Bengal later this month The deletion of such a large number of names has sharpened concerns over errors, exclusion risks and the criteria used to determine "valid" voters."There is no example of an election happening in India with voters' rights remaining suspended," said political scientist Sibaji Pratim Basu. He says leaving out 2.7 million voters is such an "absurd proposition". "This is a shame for democracy," he added. But federal minister Sukanta Majumdar, a BJP leader from the state, says the revision exercise was necessary in the national interest. "The constitution says only Indian citizens can choose prime ministers and chief ministers. Therefore, purging non-citizens was important," he told the BBC.Asked about elections taking place while the status of 2.7 million voters remains unresolved, Majumdar blamed the state government, alleging it had "slowed the process" by taking the matter to the Supreme Court. He also dismissed allegations that the poll panel was favouring the BJP.The impact of the overall revision has been uneven, with sharp cuts in some urban pockets in the state.In the state capital, Kolkata city, nearly 29.6% of voters were struck off the rolls in the north and 27.5% in the south - among the highest rates in the state.Paschim Bardhaman district saw the second-highest drop, with the electorate shrinking 16.9%. About 80% of those deleted are Hindus, many from Hindi-speaking communities with roots in northern India.Border districts with Bangladesh - North 24-Parganas, Nadia, Murshidabad, Malda, Uttar Dinajpur and Cooch Behar - also saw heavy deletions.North 24-Parganas alone lost 1.26 million voters (15%), with most deletions mirroring its Hindu-majority profile. Murshidabad, India's most Muslim-populous district, saw 749,000 names (13%) struck off, broadly reflecting its demographics.These border districts have become the epicentre of the controversy, where most exclusions occurred in the final phase - under the "logical discrepancy" category. Muslims bore the brunt in districts like Murshidabad and Malda, while Dalit Hindus - especially from the Bangladeshi migrant Matua community - were hardest hit in North 24-Parganas and Nadia.In the central Indian state of Madhya Pradesh, too, large numbers were flagged under "logical discrepancy". But with no elections due until 2028, voters there have more time to resolve their status.The issue has since eclipsed almost every other campaign theme. At her election rallies, Banerjee said she would move the India" class="entity-link entity-organization" data-entity-id="38764" data-entity-type="organization">Supreme Court of India again. "How can the elections start without solving the cases of 2.7 million voters?" she asked.On Friday, the court said they would hear the case on 13 April, offering a narrow and uncertain window for relief.NurPhoto via Getty ImagesMamata Banerjee alleges the roll revision exercise has disenfranchised millions - particularly MuslimsMukulika Banerjee, an anthropologist at the London School of Economics, says the pattern of exclusion in West Bengal indicates that certain categories of the population may have been "selectively targeted".Banerjee says voting is not just a procedural right but a deeply meaningful act - especially for marginalised communities. "By denying them their right to vote, one takes away one of their fundamental rights, and one that is hugely meaningful to them and allows them to assert their voice."She recalls a voter in West Bengal's Sundarbans telling her: "If we don't vote, no-one will even bother to remember that poor people exist."In Harishchandrapur, a constituency in Malda district along the Bangladesh border, 35-year-old Hasnara Khatun is furious."I am very angry," she says, adding that her father, grandfather and great grandfather have been voters. Now, five of the seven members of their family have their voting rights suspended."We have been effectively turned into non-citizens. Who knows what comes next? "The system can't be trusted anymore. Therefore, the legal battle will go on, but we won't stop protests either," says Khatun.Snigdhendu Bhattacharya is a Kolkata-based independent journalist
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Entities

10 identified
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Keywords & salience

10 terms
voter roll revision
0.90
west bengal
0.80
voting rights
0.80
electoral roll
0.70
muslim population
0.70
illegal bangladeshi infiltrators
0.60
political turmoil
0.60
supreme court
0.50
election commission
0.50
disenfranchisement
0.40
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Topic connections

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