BJP accuses Kejriwal of promoting fake voter IDs

| | New Delhi
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BJP accuses Kejriwal of promoting fake voter IDs

Sunday, 29 December 2024 | Staff Reporter | New Delhi

Delhi BJP on Saturday accused Arvind Kejriwal of trying to rig upcoming assembly elections by promoting fake schemes and creating fake voter IDs using fraudulent Aadhaar cards.  

Leveling these charges Delhi BJP president Virendra Sachdeva during a news conference also presented Hindu homeowners whose addresses were used to create fake Muslim votes, stating that households with five members were suddenly recorded as having 60 or more Muslim voters.

Sachdeva alleged that Kejriwal, along with his MLAs, has been running a fake voter scheme for the last 10 years to win elections.

He said voter history shows a suspicious trend. Before the 2015 assembly elections, the voter count in Delhi increased by 14 lakh in just eight months, jumping from approximately 1.19 crore in 2014 Lok Sabha elections to 1.33 crore.

After that, during the next four years leading to the 2019 Lok Sabha elections, only six lakh voters were added. But within eight months before the 2020 assembly elections, the voter count jumped by another nine lakh to over 1.48 crore.

Sachdeva claimed that they tried to repeat this cycle again. Due to BJP’s check most such voter application were rejected this time but now numerous fake voter forms were recently submitted online across Delhi.  BJP demands that the Election Commission conduct a thorough investigation into these new voter applications in Delhi.

 

 

Sachdeva stated that the Election Commission filed an FIR at Shaheen Bagh police station against four accused involved in voter fraud: Jameel Alam, Kishunik, Mohammed Naeem, and Shabana Khatoon.

He also raised the issue of why names of individuals who are no longer alive, have left the city, or are not Delhi voters, still exist in the voter list. He alleged widespread forgery in the creation of fake voter IDs and documents like Aadhaar cards in Delhi.

The state BJP chief highlighted that the age of many newly enrolled voters ranges from 38 to 80 years, with no apparent legitimacy, and presented a list of such names during the press conference.

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