Nearly 32% of Nagpur voters unmapped ahead of SIR exercise
Nearly 32% of Nagpur voters unmapped before SIR drive

Nagpur: Nearly one in every three voters in Nagpur district remains unmapped in the ongoing pre-Special Intensive Revision (SIR) exercise, with urban constituencies emerging as the weakest-performing segment ahead of the actual SIR drive scheduled to begin from the end of June.

Mapping Progress and Shortfall

Constituency-wise data accessed by TOI reveals that out of Nagpur district's current electorate of 46.41 lakh voters, 31.76 lakh electors have been mapped with records from the previous SIR exercise, achieving an overall mapping of 68.45%. This leaves approximately 14.64 lakh electors — nearly 32% of the district's total electorate — unmapped at the pre-SIR stage.

Urban-Rural Divide

The data, as of June 5, highlights a sharp urban-rural divide. The six rural Assembly constituencies together recorded a mapping percentage of 77.81%, while the six city constituencies lagged significantly at 60.08%. In actual numbers, close to 9.78 lakh electors in urban constituencies remain unmapped compared with around 3.86 lakh in rural segments.

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Constituency-Wise Performance

Among individual constituencies, Nagpur West recorded the lowest mapping at 56.17%, followed by Nagpur North at 57.39% and Nagpur East at 59.82%. Nagpur South-West and Nagpur South remained around the 60.90% mark. On the other hand, rural constituencies such as Umred and Ramtek posted the highest mapping percentages at 87.20% and 87.50%, respectively, while Katol recorded 83.70%.

Anomalies Identified

The exercise has also identified a substantial number of "electors with anomalies" — cases involving duplication, shifting, deaths or discrepancies requiring further scrutiny. Across the district, around 8.65 lakh electors have been flagged under the anomaly category, including 4.79 lakh from city constituencies alone.

Official Insights

Election officials stated that the pre-SIR mapping process aims to link existing electors with records from the previous intensive revision exercise before the full-scale SIR process begins later this month. They attributed the slower urban mapping pace to factors such as high migration, rented populations, rapid urban expansion and difficulties in physical verification in densely populated areas.

Nagpur district currently has 4,610 polling stations, including 2,158 in urban constituencies and 2,452 in rural segments. The district's electorate has also witnessed a steep rise over the years, increasing from 25.22 lakh electors in 2002 to over 46.41 lakh at present.

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