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.


Russia puts death toll from Ukrainian strike on occupied village at 27. Kyiv rejects accusation

Updated 7 sec ago
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Russia puts death toll from Ukrainian strike on occupied village at 27. Kyiv rejects accusation

Russian authorities said Friday that the death toll from a Ukrainian drone strike they said struck a café in a Russian-occupied village in Ukraine’s Kherson region rose to 27 people. Kyiv denied attacking civilian targets.
Svetlana Petrenko, spokeswoman of Russia’s main criminal investigation agency, the Investigative Committee, said in a statement that a Ukrainian drone strike on a café and hotel in the village of Khorly, where at least 100 civilians were celebrating New Year’s Eve overnight into Thursday, killed 27 people, including two minors. A total of 31, including five minors, were hospitalized with injuries.
A criminal probe on the charges of carrying out an act of terrorism has been opened, Petrenko said.
Kyiv denied attacking civilians. Spokesman of Ukraine’s General Staff, Dmytro Lykhovii, told Ukraine’s public broadcaster Suspilne on Thursday that Ukrainian forces “adhere to the norms of international humanitarian law” and “carry out strikes exclusively against Russian military targets, facilities of the Russian fuel and energy sector, and other lawful targets.”
Lykhovii said that General Staff has published an explicit list of targets that the Ukrainian army struck on the night of New Year’s Eve. The list did not include strikes on occupied parts of the Kherson region.
Lykhovii noted that Russia has repeatedly used disinformation and false statements to disrupt the ongoing peace negotiations.
The Associated Press could not independently verify claims made about the attack.
Russia’s accusations against Ukraine come amid a US-led diplomatic push to end the nearly four-year war in Ukraine. Earlier this week, Moscow alleged that Kyiv launched a long-range drone attack against a residence of Russian President Vladimir Putin in northwestern Russia overnight from Sunday to Monday.
Kyiv has called the allegations of an attack on Putin’s residence a ruse to derail ongoing peace negotiations, which have ramped up in recent weeks on both sides of the Atlantic.
In his New Year’s address, Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelensky said that a peace deal was “90 percent ready” but warned that the remaining 10 percent, believed to include key sticking points such as territory, would “determine the fate of peace, the fate of Ukraine and Europe, how people will live.”
Trump’s special envoy Steve Witkoff said Wednesday that he, Secretary of State Marco Rubio and Trump’s son-in-law and adviser Jared Kushner had a “productive call” with the national security advisers of Britain, France, Germany and Ukraine “to discuss advancing the next steps in the European peace process.”
Elsewhere in Ukraine, Russia conducted what local authorities called “one of the most massive” drone attacks at Zaporizhzhia overnight.
At least nine Russian drones struck the city, damaging dozens of residential buildings and other civilian infrastructure, head of the regional administration, Ivan Fedorov, wrote on Telegram on Friday. There were no casualties, the official said.
Overall, Russia fired 116 long-range drones at Ukraine last night, according to Ukraine’s Air Force, which said that 86 drones were intercepted, while 27 more have reached their targets.
The Russian Defense Ministry reported Friday that its air defenses intercepted 64 Ukrainian drones overnight over multiple Russian regions.
Vyacheslav Gladkov, governor of Russia’s Belgorod region on the border with Ukraine, on Friday also accused Ukrainian forces of carrying out a missile strike on the city of Belgorod. Two women were hospitalized with injuries, Gladkov said. The strike shattered windows in multiple residential buildings and damaged an unspecified “commercial” facility and a number of cars, according to the official.