<p>Despite over a dozen political parties questioning the reliability of electronic voting machines, none of them took up the challenge to prove it they can be tampered with.<br /><br />The Election Commission had recently thrown open a challenge to all political parties. Though the CPM and the NCP accepted the challenge and appeared for the event held here on Saturday, they opted out of the test. After the event, Chief Election Commissioner Nasim Zaidi told reporters that EVMs used by the poll panel are “non-tamperable”, and with 100% use of paper trail machines in all future elections, the issue of tamperability of the machines “stands closed”.<br /><br />He also made it clear that there would be no such challenge in future to test the reliability of EVMs. The CPM said they didn’t want to participate in the challenge, but wished to understand the EVM process.<br /><br />The NCP team, for its part, informed they, too, didn’t want to participate in any test, but were only interested to participate in an academic exercise, Zaidi said.<br /><br />The challenge was organised after several major Opposition parties had claimed that the faith of people in the machines had eroded due to charges of tampering. <br /><br />Representatives from both the parties were offered four machines and four hours to hack into them. The machines were brought from Punjab, Uttarakhand and Uttar Pradesh where the recent Assembly elections were held.<br /><br />Zaidi said the CPM members were given a detailed demonstration by the commission about EVMs and they were “satisfied”.<br /><br />The NCP team led by Rajya Sabha member Vandana Chavan conveyed that the main reason for their apprehension was over the voting machines used in the municipal polls in Maharashtra, the commission clarified that the EVMs used by the Maharashtra State Election Commission did not belong to the ECI. <br /><br />However, when the NCP team again met the commission officials and sought time to participate in the challenge or by way of academic exercise by selecting the EVM and then accessing the memory and battery numbers by opening the machines themselves, the commission agreed to that, a statement said. <br /><br />Earlier, the commission had rejected the AAP and Congress demand to allow them to access motherboard of the voting machines.<br /></p>
<p>Despite over a dozen political parties questioning the reliability of electronic voting machines, none of them took up the challenge to prove it they can be tampered with.<br /><br />The Election Commission had recently thrown open a challenge to all political parties. Though the CPM and the NCP accepted the challenge and appeared for the event held here on Saturday, they opted out of the test. After the event, Chief Election Commissioner Nasim Zaidi told reporters that EVMs used by the poll panel are “non-tamperable”, and with 100% use of paper trail machines in all future elections, the issue of tamperability of the machines “stands closed”.<br /><br />He also made it clear that there would be no such challenge in future to test the reliability of EVMs. The CPM said they didn’t want to participate in the challenge, but wished to understand the EVM process.<br /><br />The NCP team, for its part, informed they, too, didn’t want to participate in any test, but were only interested to participate in an academic exercise, Zaidi said.<br /><br />The challenge was organised after several major Opposition parties had claimed that the faith of people in the machines had eroded due to charges of tampering. <br /><br />Representatives from both the parties were offered four machines and four hours to hack into them. The machines were brought from Punjab, Uttarakhand and Uttar Pradesh where the recent Assembly elections were held.<br /><br />Zaidi said the CPM members were given a detailed demonstration by the commission about EVMs and they were “satisfied”.<br /><br />The NCP team led by Rajya Sabha member Vandana Chavan conveyed that the main reason for their apprehension was over the voting machines used in the municipal polls in Maharashtra, the commission clarified that the EVMs used by the Maharashtra State Election Commission did not belong to the ECI. <br /><br />However, when the NCP team again met the commission officials and sought time to participate in the challenge or by way of academic exercise by selecting the EVM and then accessing the memory and battery numbers by opening the machines themselves, the commission agreed to that, a statement said. <br /><br />Earlier, the commission had rejected the AAP and Congress demand to allow them to access motherboard of the voting machines.<br /></p>