Former Calcutta HC Judge Sahidullah Munshi Voices Concern over His Exclusion from West Bengal SIR

The supplementary list brought fresh confusion. His wife and son appeared as “under adjudication,” while his own name appeared as “not found.” He said no reason was shared for this classification. He added that the process lacked transparency since officials did not issue receipts for submitted documents. This leaves applicants without proof of submission and…

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Former Calcutta High Court judge Sahidullah Munshi has raised concerns over the ongoing SIR of electoral rolls in West Bengal after authorities marked him as “not found” despite repeated document submission and verification.

Munshi said he and his family submitted all required documents soon after the first notification. The BLO received their papers. Their names did not appear in the draft rolls, which led to anxiety. Officials later called them for fresh verification at the Entally office. Munshi submitted all documents again, including his passport, and expected clearance.

The supplementary list brought fresh confusion. His wife and son appeared as “under adjudication,” while his own name appeared as “not found.” He said no reason was shared for this classification. He added that the process lacked transparency since officials did not issue receipts for submitted documents. This leaves applicants without proof of submission and without clarity on rejection grounds.

Munshi said he chose not to rely on his past position as a High Court judge. He aimed to be treated like any other citizen and relied only on standard documents. He questioned how a person in his position faces such uncertainty despite full compliance.

Munshi noted that legal options remain limited. A person may raise violation of natural justice. If relief doesn’t come from the tribunal, the matter may reach the High Court under Art. 226.