
Picture : @AITCofficial/X
Sharpening her attack on the Election Commission, West Bengal Chief Minister Mamata Banerjee urged CEC Gyanesh Kumar to halt the “arbitrary and flawed” SIR in the state, warning that its continuation in the present form could trigger “mass disenfranchisement” and “strike at the foundations of democracy”.
According media reports, In a strongly worded letter dated December 3, Banerjee accused the commission of presiding over what she described as an “unplanned, ill-prepared and ad hoc” process marked by “serious irregularities, procedural violations, and administrative lapses”.
She asserted that the situation on the ground had worsened despite her two earlier communications to the chief election commissioner (CEC).
“I am once again constrained to write to you in order to place on record my grave concern,” Banerjee wrote, recalling that she had flagged similar issues in letters dated November 20 and December 2.
“Regrettably, instead of any corrective course being adopted, the situation on the ground has only deteriorated further.”
The chief minister said the “undue haste” with which the SIR was being carried out, “without adequate groundwork or preparation”, had rendered the process “fundamentally flawed”.
Calling the issues “illustrative and by no means exhaustive”, the chief minister concluded that the SIR, as presently conducted, is “compromised” and strikes at the basics of democracy.
“Taken together, these deficiencies demonstrate that the SIR process, as presently conducted, stands deeply compromised and strikes at the basic structural framework of our democracy,” the chief minister wrote, warning that if corrective steps were not taken immediately, the “exercise must be halted” to prevent “irreparable damage” and “large-scale disenfranchisement”.
She alleged that officials entrusted with the task had received no proper or uniform training, while the IT systems in use were “defective, unstable, and unreliable”.

