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Did ECI miss the dead and ‘permanently transferred’ voters of Bihar in January?

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Even the Election Commission of India (ECI) has uploaded the list of 65 lakh Bihar voters dropped from the draft election list released on 1 August, the number crunchers are finding it difficult to track trends. One such analyst states that the format in which the booth-wise names are shared by the ECI makes any analysis take time and cumbersome. So trending trends are taking time, they explained.

However, published in an analysis Indian express Out of the 38 districts of the state, out of the names dropped in three, ie Patna, Madhubani and Eastern Champaran, show some interesting trends. The three districts have 36 assembly seats together, of which 22 were won by the NDA in 2020. These three districts have also recorded the most deletion.

1. 10.63 lakh voters (16.5 percent of 65 percent of 65-millions of 65 percent) have been removed from lists in these three districts.

2. Permanently transferred (36.74 percent), deceased (32.23 pcs), absent (21.2 pcs) and already nominated (9.8 pcs) were the reasons cited for the deletion

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National News

Artificial rainfall is no option for lack of political will

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This artificial lake was originally built by building a dam across the Banganga River. Many rivers of Rajasthan are now fighting to catch their existence – Banganga is a prime example.

There is no tributary of Banganga produced in the bire hills. The 380 km long river passes through Jaipur, Dausa, Bharatpur and finally merges with the Yamuna River near Fatebad Agra in Uttar Pradesh. It was once called ‘Kamdenu’ by farmers, which was to bring them to irrigation for a lot of desire.

By 1996-97, the river kept so much water that a fair was held every year on the banks of Banganga in Made Village. Thousands of people were involved in this.

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Now, there is a Madhosagar dam project in Dausa district on Banganga. The fresh water of this river was that which allows the Wetlands to flourish at Ghana Bird National Park, Bharatpur.

After Chambal, Banganga is the second river of Rajasthan, whose water merges directly with the Yamuna. Since its confluence with Yamuna is in fracture streams, it is also known as a ‘broken river’.

This river still flows faster beyond Jaipur, but it has dried up near Ramgarh, where there is a lake (or used to happen).

Once, water in Ramgarh dam not only came from Banganga (from Viratnagar), but also from Madhobeni River (from Manoharpur), Gomti Canal and other streams. Now, near Daulaj village in Viratnagar, Banganga, Ramgarh Dam has the main contribution of water – or well, none other.

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In Kerala, BJP woos migrant voters of Jammu and Kashmir …

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Push to nominate migrant voters

In a bright and ‘interesting’ political development, the Kerala unit of the BJP has defended his move for the first time in the migrant voters, especially in Thrissur, where the actor-royal-politician Suresh Gopi was the first Lok Sabha seat from the state.

Amid allegations about irregularities from Congress and CPM and sudden voter list spikes, BJP State Vice President B. Gopalakrishnan said that the party would legally continue to bring new voters, even from Jammu and Kashmir, if they fulfilled the recognition of one year residence.

“If someone from Kashmir wants to vote for me, they can stay here and vote for me,” he said.

“We can bring the people of Jammu and Kashmir, keep them here for a year and keep them on the roll. We can also do it tomorrow,” he explained.

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Kerala government investigates in email leak boomengs, caught in violation of IT Act with CMO

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Call it an inquiry into an investigation … but when the Chief Minister’s Office of Kerala (CMO) ordered the World Bank to investigate the suspected leakage of a confidential e-mail for the State Agriculture Department, it was not more for Bargain, about the project of Rs 2,366 crore on climate-resistant agricultural-value enhancement (Kera).

Chief of Agriculture IAS officer B. The investigation led by Ashoka, especially to explain how the press reached the press, was allegedly distracted for non-divided uses, part of the first trisks released by the World Bank.

But instead of finding the culprits within the Agriculture Department, Ashok’s report revealed that it was the office of Chief Minister Pinarayi Vijayan, who illegally used a password-protected mail to the Agriculture Department-Agricultural Minister-Agriculture Minister P. Without the knowledge or authority of Prasad!

Only four designated officers had legal access to that communication. The investigation described the move as permanent orders and possibly a violation of the Information Technology Act.

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