The Election Commission today rejected Mayawati‘s plea for the tampering of EVM’s and said that it was “baseless and wild” and is rejected by the Election Commision.
In a strongly-worded statement, the commission said, “Baseless, speculative and wild allegations are being made which deserve to be rejected. The sharp reaction of the poll panel came after Mayawati and Chief Minister Arvind Kejriwal claimed that the machines were tampered with in recently concluded Assembly elections in five states.
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“Such concerns about alleged tamperability of ECI-EVM have been raised earlier also since their introduction including before high court and the Supreme Court. “These allegations have been dismissed. ECI unequivocally reiterates that given effective technical and administrative safeguards, EVMs are not tamperable and integrity of electoral process is preserved,” it said.
The EC’s rebuttal came a day after Mayawati said she will move court against the alleged tampering of the EVMs. Kejriwal too had alleged that the EVMs may have been tampered with in Punjab. “It is about the credibility of the Election Commission and the faith of people in the electoral system. We have strong prima facie evidence of foul play,” he had said.
Meanwhile, several former chief election commissioners said losing parties should not blame their loss on the EVMs. Former CECs M S Gill, V S Sampath and H S Brahma told PTI that the machines are “reliable and tamper-proof” and political parties should not question their reliability if they lose elections.
It recalled that the “controversy” over the reliability of the machines was raised by political parties after the 2009 Lok Sabha polls. “However, no specific allegation was raised nor could they prove before any court,” the statement said. It said in an “extraordinary” move in August 2009, it had invited those who had expressed reservations about the EVM to come and demonstrate the flaws in the machine.
Those invited included political parties, petitioners before various courts and some individuals who had been writing to the commission on this issue. 100 EVMs brought from ten states — Andhra Pradesh, Delhi, Gujarat, Karnataka, Madhya Pradesh, Maharashtra, Punjab, Rajasthan, Tamil Nadu and Uttar Pradesh and were kept at the commission’s office here for scrutiny and for any application to establish its alleged fallibility.
“The outcome of this exercise was that none of the persons, who were given the opportunity, could actually demonstrate any tamperability of the ECI-EVMs. They either failed or chose not to demonstrate,” the poll panel said.