The Supreme Court on Friday directed the Election
Commission of India to preserve video clips of the polling during the pendency
of the pleas against the decision to increase the maximum number of voters per
polling station from 1,200 to 1,500.
A bench comprising Chief Justice Sanjiv Khanna and
Justice Sanjay Kumar passed the order the counsel for the Election Commission
of India (ECI) sought time to respond to the PIL filed by one Indu Prakash
Singh.
Singh has challenged the panel's communications in
August 2024 for increasing the number of voters per polling stations in each
constituency.
"The counsel appearing for respondent number 1
prays for further time to file affidavit. Let the affidavit be filed within
three weeks from today. We deem it appropriate to direct respondent no 1 to
maintain the CCTV recordings as they were doing earlier," the bench said.
The top court on January 15 sought responses from
the Centre and the poll panel on Congress general secretary Jairam Ramesh's
plea against the recent amendments, including no public access to CCTV, to the
1961 election rules.
Singh said the decision to increase the number of
voters per polling booth was arbitrary and not based on any data.
On October 24, the top court refused to issue any
notice to the poll panel but allowed the petitioner to serve the copy to the
standing counsel of the ECI so that its stand on the issue is known.
The petitioner contended the poll panel's decision
would impact the voters during the ensuing assembly elections in Maharashtra, Bihar
and Delhi.
Singh said elections were normally held for 11 hours
and it took about 60 to 90 seconds to cast a vote, and therefore 660 to 490
persons could cast their vote in a day at one polling station with one EVM.
Considering the average voting percentage to be
65.70 per cent, it was perceivable that a polling station prepared to accept
1,000 electors saw around 650 turn up.
Singh's petition said there were booths where the
elector turnout was in the range of 85-90 per cent.
"In such a situation, about 20 per cent of
voters will either end up standing in the queue beyond the voting hours or due
to long waiting times, will abandon exercising their right to vote. Neither is
acceptable in a progressive republic or a democracy," it added.