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The Passport of Dissent: When the Voter List Becomes a Weapon
A man who shaped front pages that thundered from Kolkata to Delhi, a journalist whose headlines were art, and whose newspaper became a tiny leak in the bulldozed landscape of Indian media — today he stands at the passport office, not as an editor but as a suspect. R. Rajagopal, former editor of The Telegraph, cannot renew his passport. The reason? His name is missing from the voter list. And the voter list, we are being told, now determines whether you can travel, whether you can eat from the ration shop, whether you are still a citizen without a sword hanging over your head.
The Headlines That Made Someone Uncomfortable
If you never saw The Telegraph's front page under Rajagopal, you missed a rare thing: a newspaper that didn't bow. After 2014, while Delhi's papers gradually surrendered to the lapdog media template, Rajagopal's team kept asking questions. When Manipur burned and the Prime Minister remained silent for 79 days, the front page carried 79 crocodiles — a visual scream against the “crocodile tears” shed only after the damage was done.
In another edition, they called Smriti Irani “aanti national”, a pun so sharp it became a national talking point. And when a man named Gopal Sharma pulled a pistol on Jamia students during the anti-CAA protests and called himself “Rambhakt Gopal”, the paper asked on its front page: “Hey Rambhakt?” A perfectly fair question. But these were not just headlines. For someone sitting in the corridors of power, they were evidence of “anti-Modi venom”. And the punishment for that venom would arrive not through a press council notice, but through the quiet deletion of a name from the electoral roll.
The Voter Who Vanished
In February 2026, Rajagopal applied for passport renewal. Normally a 10-15 day affair, it has now been over 100 days. He later learned that in March, his name was removed from the voter list of Ballygunge constituency, Kolkata. The reason? During the Special Summary Revision (SIR) exercise, his name — and that of his deceased father, a retired Gandhian professor — could not be found in the 2002 electoral roll. Yes, 2002. A year when many of us were still in school, and Rajagopal was already a working journalist. His father passed away in 2016. But the absence of their names in a 24-year-old list became ground enough to erase him today.
Rajagopal wrote in a post (translated from English): “I completed biometric formalities on 19 March 2026, but police verification was not cleared because my name is no longer on the voters' list. Despite submitting several alternative documents, I was told they are not enough. On 27 June 2026, it will be the 100th day since my biometrics were taken. Last week the passport authority formally informed me that Kolkata Police had sent a negative report citing the removal of my name from the voters' list.”
| The 100-Day Ordeal of an Editor | |
|---|---|
| Feb 2026 | Rajagopal applies for passport renewal. |
| 19 Mar 2026 | Biometrics submitted. Application enters police verification. |
| March 2026 | Name silently removed from Ballygunge voter list during SIR. |
| April 2026 | He misses his daughter's wedding in the US (holds valid 10-year US visa). |
| June 2026 | Passport office reveals adverse police report citing missing voter status. |
| 27 June 2026 | 100th day without passport renewal. Appointment given only for 17 July. |
The Passport Isn't a Citizenship Proof — But Don't Tell the Police
The Ministry of External Affairs has repeated: a passport is a travel document, not proof of citizenship. Yet the Kolkata Police station, as Rajagopal narrates, insisted on seeing a voter ID for verification — something the passport form itself marks as “if available”, purely optional. He showed his Aadhaar. They refused. One-time password through voter ID was the only route they would accept.
This is not a clerical oversight. It is a deliberate conflation. Once your name is deleted from the voter list, the police writes “adverse”, and the passport office freezes. The government may claim the two are separate, but on the ground, the bureaucrat has learned a new lesson: a deleted name means a suspect. If you are among the 27 lakh people whose names were removed due to “logical inconsistency” — the vague, mysterious category introduced during SIR — you may soon discover that your passport, your ration card, even your children's school admission, are slipping away.
Who Gets Deleted? The 27-Lakh Question
In West Bengal, the Election Commission brought a new weapon: logical inconsistency. If a voter had five children, or if the age gap between parent and child was less than 15 years, or if the spelling of ‘Maqbool' had a Q instead of a K, names were struck off. Anil Mukherjee became Anil Mukhopadhyay in a university certificate — deleted. Maqbool with a K — deleted. Not a single foreigner was found, but 27 lakh Indian citizens were branded doubtful. The Election Commission has not claimed these 27 lakh are non-citizens. They have only been dumped into an adjudication queue.
Now a tribunal set up under Supreme Court orders is supposed to decide their fate. The tribunal started on 20 March 2026. With the current pace, clearing the backlog will take 20 years. Twenty years. Meanwhile, your ration stops. Your passport is blocked. Your children's school asks questions. And you cannot vote in the next election. Did you notice the trap? You can't vote to change the government that did this to you.
The Numerical Irony: 63% of India is Now Suspicious
Here is a number that should frighten every supporter of this government as well — if they can still think. In the 2019 Lok Sabha election, the BJP got about 37.4% of the votes. In 2024, it rose only to about 38%. That means over 60% of voters did not vote for the BJP. They are, in the government's binary logic, “opposition”. By the reasoning that a journalist who criticized the Prime Minister must be punished, what do you do with those 63%? Delete them all? Deny them a passport? Make them run from pillar to post with papers from 1952?
| Election Year | BJP Vote Share | Non-BJP Vote Share |
|---|---|---|
| 2019 Lok Sabha | 37.4% | 62.6% |
| 2024 Lok Sabha | ~38% | ~62% |
Visualizing who actually stands where:
The message being sent is unmistakable: if you don't clap for the regime, your documentary existence will be questioned. The voter list is no longer a register of citizens; it is becoming a register of loyalty.
The Editors Guild Speaks, a Government Advisor Snarls
The Editors Guild of India issued a statement condemning the treatment meted out to Rajagopal, noting that a person who spent decades in public life as a journalist and editor has been disenfranchised and stranded. The reply came not from a minister, but from Kanchan Gupta, an advisor to the Ministry of Information and Broadcasting. He tweeted: “Where were the Editors Guild's principles when R. Rajagopal ran a venomous campaign against the Modi government? Remember how Smriti Irani was called ‘aanti national' on the front page? So roll up your outrage and smoke it.”
Read that again. A government advisor is telling journalists: you criticised us, you called a minister names, now face the consequences. When someone pointed out that Gupta himself had written against Mrs. Gandhi in the past, he wriggled out saying he was talking about “selective outrage”. But the statement he attacked was precisely about the passport denial. This is not a slip of the tongue. It is the official mindset. It reveals that somewhere inside the system, a file moves with a note: “anti-Modi editor – delay passport”.
The Security Control Organisation – Treating an Editor Like an Infiltrator
And then comes the most chilling detail. Journalist Ullekh NP reported in Open magazine that Rajagopal's case has been forwarded to the Security Control Organisation (SCO). For those who don't know, the SCO handles registration and deportation of Bangladeshi, Pakistani, Nepali and other foreign nationals. Rajagopal, a man whose byline was read by millions, who holds a valid 10-year US visa, has been bracketed with potential illegal immigrants.
Ask yourself: was his father's missing name in the 2002 list the real reason? Or was it the crocodiles on the front page? The question “Hey Rambhakt?” after a student was shot? Because if a senior editor can be sent to the SCO queue, what chance does a daily wage worker, a Muslim weaver, or a tribal farmer have when their name is deleted because of a spelling error?
Ration, School, Dignity — The Chain of Punishment
The Telegraph reported on 28 June 2026 that in several parts of Bengal, ration shops have put up notices: those whose names are cut from the voter list must contact the ration office, or their cards may be cancelled. Spelling mistake? Logical inconsistency? No ration. In Bihar too, welfare measures were denied to those deleted during the SIR exercise. The late Jagdeep Chhokar of ADR had warned years ago: “You were voting comfortably till 2024. Suddenly, you are put in a suspect category. What was the Election Commission doing from 2004 to 2024?” Now his warning is a documentary on repeat.
The Unspoken Warning: Speak, and Your Documents Vanish
Rajagopal himself does not want this to be only about him. He told The Wire that the key problem is structural: the SIR was meant to clean the electoral roll, not decide citizenship. The Supreme Court upheld it for that limited purpose, and asked the EC to forward deleted names to the Home Ministry for any citizenship action. But on the ground, police stations, passport offices, and ration dealers are already treating a deleted name as a citizenship void.
This is what happens when the state wants to silence you. Not with a knock on the door at midnight, but with a form that remains pending for 100 days. Not with a direct order, but with a negative police report that no one will show you. You become a citizen in limbo. You are not deported, but you cannot leave. You are not jailed, but you cannot eat. You are not declared a foreigner, but you are made to feel like one in your own country.
Criticisms
- The Modi government is systematically converting electoral rolls into loyalty registers. Critical journalists, opposition voters, and marginalised communities are being deleted under the garb of “logical inconsistency”, and then denied passports, ration, and basic rights.
- The Election Commission has abdicated its constitutional duty by allowing a reckless SIR drive that brands 27 lakh citizens as suspect without evidence of foreign origin. It hasn't even disclosed how many actual foreigners were found.
- The Kolkata Police and passport authorities are weaponizing a non-mandatory voter ID requirement to block Rajagopal's renewal — a clear case of administrative vendetta against a Modi critic.
- Kanchan Gupta, as an I&B Ministry advisor, publicly justified the targeting of a journalist by referencing past critical coverage. This normalises state retaliation against the press and reveals the government's punitive intent.
- The glacial tribunal set up for SIR deletions — which will take 20 years to clear cases — is a deliberate design to keep millions in documentary purgatory, exhausting them into submission or silence.
- The forwarding of Rajagopal's file to the Security Control Organisation, an agency meant for illegal immigrants, is a grotesque insult and an attempt to humiliate an independent voice into irrelevance.
- The government's silence on the passport-voter linkage, despite the MEA's own clarification that passport is not citizenship proof, exposes a dual strategy: say one thing in court, let the police do the opposite on the ground.
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