New Delhi: The plea has been filed by Advocate C.R. Jayasukin The advocate contends that EVMs can easily be hacked, complete profile of a voter can be accessed through them, can be used to manage the results, tampered by an election official and even that the software of an EVM can be changed.
"Because the Electronic Voting Machines also do not generate a slip confirm the candidate one voted post pressing the button. In these cases, it is very easy for a criminal or a hacker to manipulate the votes. If the machines would generate such slips, then people could verify if the numbers of votes captured via EVMs was in line with the details on slips received by the voter," read the plea.
He has cited countries including England, Netherlands, France, Germany, who have banned the use of EVMs in view of security concerns. "EVMs can be hacked is a threat that has been presented not only in India but in many other countries, which is why a number of them have banned the voting machines. Electronic Voting Machines(EVM), like all other machines, are prone to errors and malfunctioning. No machine ever made anywhere in the world is infallible," read his plea.