Election Commission's Hackathon In Question After Court Order
AAP, which has accused the Election Commission of colluding with the BJP to rig results in its favour, has announced that it will hold a parallel hackathon of its own tomorrow.
Highlights of Uttarakhand Court Order
♦Hackathon with vote machines could be unconstitutional: court
♦Political parties claim machines can be rigged
♦Election Commission dares them to prove it tomorrow
The Election Commission has organized more than 10 vote machines that were recently used in elections including in Uttar Pradesh and Uttarakhand for tomorrow's hackathon, where political parties will try to prove in Delhi that the machines can be rigged. However, the Uttarakhand High Court has said the event is unconstitutional; the Election Commission has said it will not cancel its plans. The court will deliver its verdict later this evening.
The same court that had earlier asked for voting machines used in the Uttarakhand election to be sequestered after Congress candidates complained that the result was gamed against them. Today's warning to the Election Commission against its plans for tomorrow is based on a case filed by a Congressman, Dr Ramesh Pandey, who says the Commission does not have the authority to conduct the event.
So far, these are the arrangements made for the hackathon. A total of 14 Electronic Voting Machines or EVMs will be made available to representatives of Sharad Pawar's party and the Left who hope to prove that the Election Commission is wrong and that the equipment used by it can be gamed, as alleged by a series of political outfits including the Congress and Delhi Chief Minister Arvind Kejriwal's Aam Aadmi Party or AAP after Prime Minister Narendra Modi front-lined his party's gigantic wins in Uttar Pradesh and Uttarakhand.
AAP, which has accused the Election Commission of colluding with the BJP to rig results in its favour, has announced that it will hold a parallel hackathon of its own tomorrow. The machine it will make available to techies and others is the one that was used by the party in the Delhi Assembly last month in a televised demonstration of its manipulation. The Election Commission said the machine used was a far cry from the real thing and rejected the result.
Hackers will get only five hours – from 10 am to 2 pm – and access to four machines each during the EC's Hackhaton tomorrow. The other EVMs will be kept as back up.
The Election Commission has said its challenge has two parts – the hackers will have to prove that the EVMs used in the five states that just voted including Uttar Pradesh and Punjab were manipulated to favour a particular candidate or political party by altering the results stored in them.
Part Two of the challenge calls for participants to prove that the machines used in the assembly polls were manipulated before or on the day of voting.
The participant will be considered "failed" if the EVM stops functioning as a result of its inbuilt defense mechanism against tampering.
The participants – three members per party – can "physically examine" EVMs and check circuits, chips and motherboard, but cannot replace any part. Arvind Kejriwal's party had asked for these restrictions to be removed, claiming it "would not be possible to tamper with the machines without giving people a free hand to do so.