City
Epaper

SC to lawyer: Where did you learn voting is fundamental right, denies plea against EVMs

By IANS | Updated: January 6, 2021 21:00 IST

New Delhi, Jan 6 The Supreme Court on Wednesday asked a lawyer from where has he learnt that ...

Open in App

New Delhi, Jan 6 The Supreme Court on Wednesday asked a lawyer from where has he learnt that voting is a fundamental right, as it declined to entertain his plea seeking a direction to the poll panel to stop using EVMs in elections.

A bench headed by Chief Justice S. A. Bobde got irked when the lawyer insisted during the hearing that the right to vote was a fundamental right and the Election Commission decision to use EVMs in elections infringes on this right. "From where you get this that voting right is a fundamental right," the Chief Justice queried the lawyer and asked him to withdraw the PIL.

As the lawyer persisted with his argument, the Chief Justice pulled him up, "We like to learn, since when voting has become fundamental right. Do u have a copy of Constitution."

The bench asked the lawyer to first move the High Court in the matter. The plea was filed by advocate C. R. Jaya Sukin claiming that many developed countries the US, Japan, Germany do not conduct voting through EVMs as doubts have been raised about their accuracy. As per an estimate, 31 countries used or studied the EVMs, only 4 used it nationwide, 11 used EVMs in some parts or small elections, added the plea.

The bench also comprising Justices A S Bopanna and V Ramasubramanian in its order said "After some arguments, the petitioner prays for withdrawal of this petition with liberty to approach the appropriate High Court. Prayer is allowed. Accordingly, the writ petition is dismissed as withdrawn with the liberty aforesaid."

The plea had argued that EVMs can be hacked and is a threat that has been shown not only in India, but in many other countries which is why a number of them have banned the voting machines.

"Electronic Voting Machines (EVM), like all other machines, are prone to errors and malfunctioning. No machine ever made anywhere in the world is infallible", added the plea.

The plea added that fake display units could be installed in the electronic voting machines which would show manipulated numbers and fake votes could be generated from the back end.

( With inputs from IANS )

Disclaimer: This post has been auto-published from an agency feed without any modifications to the text and has not been reviewed by an editor

Tags: usNew DelhiThe Supreme CourtElection CommissionThe new delhi municipal councilDelhi south-west
Open in App

Related Stories

EntertainmentAjith Kumar Injured in Fan Frenzy After Padma Bhushan Award Ceremony, Actor Hospitalized In Chennai

InternationalColorado Nightclub Raid: Over 100 Illegal Immigrants Detain at Underground Nightclub in US; Video Surfaces

MaharashtraOver 10,000 Pakistani Nationals Traced in Maharashtra and Delhi Post-Palgham Terror Attack

BusinessGlobal Tech Firms Eye India for Manufacturing Amid US-China Tensions

InternationalIllinois Plane Crash: 4 Killed After Cessna C180G Aircraft Goes Down After Hitting Power Lines in Trilla

National Realted Stories

NationalRajasthan sees sharp drop in temperature as rain and storms sweep across state

NationalThe law was debated for 13 hours in Parliament: JPC Chairman Pal defends Waqf Act amid SC hearing

NationalFight Over Tandoori Roti Claims Two Lives at Amethi Wedding, After Verbal Fight Turns Deadly

NationalClean India, clean Delhi: NDMC’s Kuljeet Chahal launches Swachhata drive at Hanuman temple

NationalTN govt to form flying squads to curb sedative drugs sale