India's Poll Panel Has Sent Observers to 10 Countries


New Delhi: Riding on its 60 years of experience in managing the largest and the most complex electoral exercise in the world with efficiency and credibility, the Election Commission of India (ECI) has also been deploying observers in as many as 10 countries including Egypt, Venezuela, Mexico, Sri Lanka, Bhutan and now Cambodia.

"We have developed some good practices related to poll management, voter education and participation and monitoring poll expenditure, which are globally recognised," ECI director general Akshay Rout, in charge of international cooperation, told IANS in an interview.

According to Rout, poll observers in the past have been sent to countries like Egypt, Jordan, Equador, South Africa, Brazil, Venezuela, Mexico and Bhutan, besides conducting electoral consultancy programmes with around 18 countries.

Tripura's Chief Electoral Officer Ashutosh Jindal will oversee the July 28 national assembly polls in Cambodia as an international observer.

The EC chooses its hosts carefully.

"We have been getting invitations from many countries in the past. But we send observers to countries only after looking at their bonafides and their ability to conduct credible polls," former chief election commissioner (CEC) S.Y. Quraishi, who has served as a poll observer in South Africa and Kenya, told IANS.

Such deployments are mutually beneficial, he said.

"While the host nation benefits from the credibility of having an Indian poll observer, the visit broadens the Election Commission's experience and further adds to its credibility," said Quraishi, who visited South Africa in 2011 as an observer while being CEC and later Kenya earlier this year as a member of a Commonwealth delegation.

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Source: IANS