The Election Commission may have bent its own rules by agreeing to share data with Delhi police https://ift.tt/2QoLgeJ

On August 25, a letter surfaced in which the Election Commission is seemingly directing Delhi’s Chief Electoral Officer to share with the Delhi police the electoral rolls of North East Delhi parliamentary constituency along with the images of the voters.

According to the letter, the Election Commission was acting in response to a request by the Delhi police investigating the violence that had beset the area earlier in the year. The police, the letter stated, wanted to match the “photographs of culprits captured through CCTV and other video footage” with the electoral rolls.

The letter, released by Saket Gokhale, who describes himself as a transparency activist, led to an outrage on social media. Several people claimed that it not only amounted to a violation of privacy, but also contravened the commission’s own data sharing protocols.

This is clear breach of privacy https://t.co/WLWhYouVjS

— Chetan Chauhan (@chetanecostani) August 24, 2020

If this were the US, there would be a class action suit by now https://t.co/36n2UvjKun

— Prosenjit Datta (@ProsaicView) August 24, 2020
What the guidelines say

Later in the evening, the Election Commission issued a statement. In it, it referred to its guidelines, issued in 2008 and updated in 2020, on sharing of electoral rolls and the electronic photo identity card database with other governmental agencies. “The...

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