Kolkata: Bengal govt on Tuesday told Supreme Court, which is hearing appeals against the special intensive revision (SIR) in Bihar, that it "wants to be heard in the matter". The SC has allowed the state to file a formal application, a senior govt lawyer said.
A bench of justices Surya Kant and Joymalya Bagchi said the hearing would be held on Aug 12 and 13.
"The core argument against the Bihar SIR is its legal validity. If this falls through, nothing stops the EC from replicating this exercise in Bengal and other poll-bound states. Bengal govt will convey to the SC that it opposes this citizenship drive by EC to invalidate people who voted even in the 2024 Lok Sabha based on electoral rolls prepared by the poll panel," sources said.
Trinamool Congress MP Mahua Moitra has already filed a writ petition in SC, urging that EC's June 24 Bihar SIR order be scrapped for allegedly violating the Constitution and the Representation of People Act, 1950. Dubbing the order "extra-legal", Moitra has argued that the "order arbitrarily excludes commonly accepted identity documents such as Aadhaar and ration cards from the list of accepted documents, thereby putting a huge burden on the voters who are at a huge risk of getting disenfranchised".