SIR used beyond voter rolls: Veteran journalist seeks clarity after passport row
The Telegraph editor R Rajagopal has said the controversy over the delay in renewing his passport is "far bigger" than his personal case, arguing that
The Telegraph editor R Rajagopal has said the controversy over the delay in renewing his passport is "far bigger" than his personal case, arguing that the issue exposes a lack of clarity over how data collected during the Special Intensive Revision (SIR) of electoral rolls is being used by government agencies. Speaking to India Today TV, Rajagopal said the Election Commission had assured the Supreme Court that the SIR exercise was meant only for inclusion or deletion of names from electoral rolls. Read Full Story "What it shows is how one policy, which the Election Commission of India told the Supreme Court is being implemented solely for the purpose of inclusion or deletion from the voter list, is now being used for purposes that were not intended at all," he said. "In my case, it's a passport. I've heard of other cases where welfare measures are threatened because a person's name has been removed from the SIR." 'WE NEED POLICY CLARITY' Rajagopal said the core issue was not whether he eventually received his passport, but whether the government clearly defined how SIR data could be used. "The solution is not to give me a passport or reject it. The point is there should be policy clarity. Either the judiciary, the executive or the legislature must clarify whether SIR data can be used for this purpose or not," he said.
He warned that the absence of clear rules leaves citizens vulnerable. "This policy is so uncertain that it can be twisted in any way by anyone implementing it, and the citizen is completely at its mercy." Rajagopal said he had repeatedly asked police to show him the government order or circular that required a person's name to be restored to the electoral roll before passport verification could be completed. "I asked the police, 'Can you show me a government order or memo?' This is where the stonewalling began. They simply refused to answer." WHY HE DIDN'T APPLY UNDER TATKAL Responding to questions about why he did not apply for a Tatkal passport, Rajagopal said financial reasons played a role. "I lost my job when I was 56 years old and since then I haven't earned a single penny. Why should I spend double the money on a passport? I don't understand that." He also clarified that although the delay coincided with his daughter's wedding in California, he had never suggested there was a deliberate attempt to stop him from attending it. "The wedding was just an important milestone during this process. It was a coincidence." 'I DON'T THINK I WAS SINGLED OUT' Rajagopal said he had no evidence to suggest he had been personally targeted because of his editorial stance while heading The Telegraph.
