By: Debraj Mitra
Published in: *The Telegraph* *Online*
Date: April 8, 2026
Source:
https://www.telegraphindia.com/west-bengal/kolkata/am-i-not-indian-is-my-passport-also-invalid-asks-imran-zaki-after-his-name-struck-off-electoral-roll-prnt/cid/2155073

*A Calcuttan who had travelled to more than 50 countries on his Indian
passport learnt on Tuesday morning that he was no longer an Indian voter. *

*Imran Zaki, 58, a successful businessman and social worker, said he was
scared and ashamed. “I take pride in asserting my nationality and now, I
feel that identity is being questioned,” he said.*

*Zaki is among millions whose names were struck off the revised electoral
rolls in poll-bound Bengal. Many of them are from marginalised sections who
have a fraction of the resources or social standing that Zaki does.*

*But Zaki’s example shows the unfairly exclusionary nature of this
so-called revision. He said he had produced all possible papers that a
credible Indian national could have. But that was evidently not enough.*

*A former voter in the Chowringhee Assembly constituency, Imran Zaki shared
his exasperation with The Telegraph*

Several questions struck me after I saw my name deleted. Am I not an
Indian? What about the numerous stamps on my Indian passport? Is my
passport also invalid?

When my BLO said my name had been flagged for a logical discrepancy, he
could not specify its nature. I have no clue why I’m not eligible to vote
on April 29.

My 81-year-old father has also been removed from the rolls. He is too
shocked to speak. My brothers have the same documents as I do. But their
names have been approved.

At this moment, I desperately want an audience with the judicial officer
who adjudicated my case.

Ironically, I was also part of voter awareness campaigns organised by the
Election Commission in the past. I want to show the pictures from those
campaigns to the judicial officer.

I want to ask him on what ground my name was deleted. I want to show him
the stamps on my passport.

I am a staunch believer in a secular and inclusive India. I have actively
promoted interfaith amity. My daughter is married to a Punjabi. My nephew
is married to a Gujarati Hindu.

>From that perspective, what pains me immensely is the realisation that this
SIR exercise is not only problematic. It is deeply divisive. It reeks of
bias against one community. Our ancestors chose India over Pakistan. My
grandfather came to Calcutta from Siwan in Bihar in 1918.

Our family home on Weston Street was home to scores of people who came to
Calcutta from Bihar, looking for greener pastures.

For generations, my family has lived here with dignity and a deep sense of
belonging. That pride and sense of belonging have taken a beating.

I am on the executive committee of Mohammedan Sporting Club. I have been
the secretary and am still an active member of the St. Xavier’s College
Calcutta Alumni Association. I am also on the board of several Muslim
charitable organisations in Calcutta.

I have received several awards for social work, some of them from chief
ministers and governors. Our school, St. Stephen’s School in Bowbazar, has
more than 500 students from low-income families.

I will file an appeal to restore my fundamental democratic right. But I
might not be able to vote in the upcoming election.

I have voted in every election since I became eligible to vote. I take
great pride in participating in the festival of democracy. I am devastated.

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