New Delhi, Apr 11
AAP chief Arvind Kejriwal on Thursday claimed that genuine anti-BJP votes had been deleted across India at an “unprecedented scale” and questioned the Election Commission over the fairness of the ongoing polls.
His deputy Manish Sisodia accused the EC of “serving the BJP”.
In a series of tweets, Kejriwal tagged the people who claimed that their names or the names of their relatives had been deleted from the voter lists.
“What is happening EC? Are these elections fair?” Kejriwal said in a tweet.
“Anti-BJP votes deleted all across India. Reports coming from all across India that votes have been deleted on unprecedented scale. Why are all faulty EVM machines seen to be voting always for BJP?” he said in a tweet.
Polling began on Thursday morning in 91 constituencies spread across 18 states and two union territories in the first phase of the general election.
He re-tweeted and shared profiles of a number of people whose names have been deleted.
One of them included businesswoman Kiran Mazumdar Shaw who said her mother’s name had been deleted.
“My mother’s voter ID has been deleted on some flimsy excuse that there was a report that she no longer lives at her address. She is so upset I can’t tell you becos she has been at the same address for 19 years. So much for ‘verification’,” she said in a tweet.
Questioning the EC, Delhi’s Deputy Chief Minister Manish Sisodia said the poll body is serving the BJP.
“Election Commission of India! Please see what you are doing to ‘Voters of India’. So many people reporting about illegal deletion of their own votes. Is this the way you want to serve India? This nothing but serving BJP,” he said in a tweet.
Kejriwal also re-tweeted badminton player Jwala Gutta’s status where she had shared the profile of a voter who claimed her name was deleted.
Reacting to this, Kejriwal said it is “absolutely shocking and this has happened all across the country”.
AAP leaders, including Kejriwal, have already been crying foul over what they termed “illegal” removal of the names of 30 lakh genuine voters from the rolls in Delhi.