App for ‘missing voters’ as India holds mammoth election

Syed Khalid Saifullah's Missing Voter app allows voters to check if their name is on the electorate list. (Photo/Supplied)
Updated 10 April 2019
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App for ‘missing voters’ as India holds mammoth election

  • An India-based NGO is helping up sign up as many as 17 million unregistered voters
  • The creator says there are a large number of names missing from the list

DUBAI: With India just a few days away from its general election, a non-governmental organization has created an app to help sign up as many as 17 million unregistered voters.

Speaking exclusively to the Arab News, Syed Khalid Saifullah said that his company, RayLabs Technologies, has undertaken the painstaking effort of listing the disenfranchised in the run-up to the elections, which get underway on April 11.

“Millions of eligible voters may not be able to vote, and this may impact the election result,” said Saifullah.

He said that as of March 29, his volunteers across the country had enrolled 41,769 voters. 

Through his company’s free Missing Voter app, a voter can find out whether their name is on the electorate list or not, and apply for a new voter ID online. If the unregistered voter doesn’t have a phone, a volunteer can help them register by going online.

He said it is an example of how technology can aid a community development project and contribute to the nation-building process, empowering those belonging to the marginalized sections of the society, as well as addressing a gap that exists in the system.

Using census numbers as a guide, Saifullah and his team concluded that a large number of names are missing from the list, especially in Uttar Pradesh, Rajasthan and Maharashtra states. 

Even overseas Indians, especially blue-collar workers working in the Gulf, should to check to see if their names appear on the latest electoral list, Saifullah said.

With almost 900 million people registered to vote in India, it should go without saying that even if one person per household is missing out, that still translates into very large numbers.


Clashes intensify in remote east Congo, challenging US mediation

Updated 4 sec ago
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Clashes intensify in remote east Congo, challenging US mediation

Nurses at the general hospital in Fizi, a town ringed by steep highlands in eastern Congo’s South Kivu province, hurried the wounded ​soldier into surgery after he was brought in slumped on the back of a motorbike.
He was shot in both legs on the front line in the mountains north of town, where clashes between the army and rebel groups have surged in recent weeks. The fighting, unfolding away from urban areas and largely overlooked by international mediators, is drawing in more forces from all sides in the war in eastern Congo, with the potential to further complicate efforts by the Trump administration to bring peace and Western minerals investments to the region.

REBELS PUSH SOUTH AFTER CAPTURING KEY CITIES Earlier this week, the AFC/M23 rebel ‌group invoked the fighting ‌as justification for a drone attack on Kisangani airport, hundreds of ‌kilometers ⁠from ​the front ‌lines, calling it retaliation for government aerial attacks on South Kivu villages. Congo’s army has not commented on the drone strike or on the rebels’ claims that it attacked villages.
Meanwhile, the casualties continue to mount.
The hospital in Fizi, supported by the International Committee of the Red Cross, was caring for 115 wounded patients when a Reuters journalist visited at the end of January, more than four times its 25-bed capacity.
“Most of our patients have injuries in their upper or lower limbs, they often arrive with wounds that are already infected because ⁠of limited facilities on the frontline,” Richard Lwandja, a surgeon, said.
AFC/M23 staged a lightning advance early last year and in February 2025 seized ‌Bukavu, the capital of South Kivu, before advancing southward again in ‍December to briefly take Uvira on the border with ‍Burundi. The rebels withdrew a few days later under pressure from the United States, which brokered a ‍peace accord between Congo and Rwanda in June. The United Nations and Western powers say Rwanda backs AFC/M23, even exercising command and control over the group, though Rwanda denies this.
The recent fighting has centered on the highlands around Minembwe in Fizi territory, where the army has launched an operation against AFC/M23 and its local ally, the Twirwaneho, a group ​formed by Congolese Tutsi known as Banyamulenge.
“The highlands around Uvira are highly strategic: whoever controls them has access to major towns in the lowlands,” said Regan Miviri, an ⁠analyst at the Ebuteli research institute in Kinshasa. “And because the area is so remote, the fighting there draws less attention and less diplomatic pressure.”
The government’s priority, he said, was to secure Uvira and stop the conflict from extending toward Tanganyika and Katanga, areas that include some of Congo’s most important mining centers.

DIPLOMACY STRUGGLES TO KEEP PACE WITH FIGHTING
AFC/M23 has framed its presence in South Kivu’s highlands as an effort to protect the Banyamulenge, while Kinshasa has accused the coalition of exploiting long-running tensions between communities over land, cattle and local representation. The escalation in fighting comes as Congo and AFC/M23 agreed in Doha this week to activate a Qatari-mediated ceasefire monitoring mechanism. A UN team is expected to deploy to Uvira in the coming days.
At Fizi’s hospital, staff say the flow of wounded shows no sign of easing, and they worry they will not be able ‌to cope much longer.
“Roads are often impassable and supplies run out,” said Robert Zoubda, a Red Cross nurse. “If this continues, we’ll have to install more tents.”