Delay and Shiromani Gurdwara Parbandhak Committee (SGPC) elections seem to be synonymous!
After more than a two-year delay in conducting the SGPC elections, and the issue of voting rights to the Sehajdhari Sikhs lingering in the corridors of justice, the Gurdwara Elections Commission (GEC) is now dilly-dallying in officially declaring the SGPC results.
As per the notification issued by the Commission, the results are to be declared on September 22, four days after the elections were held on September 18. But, now five days have lapsed, the Commission has not yet received the final result reports from all the constituencies by the concerned Presiding Officers, while the same were prepared on the same day the elections were held.
Till the filing of the report, a senior official at the Commission’s office stated that to date the list of around 70 seats had been received and the rest were still awaited.
The elections on September 18 took place after a two-year delay. Instead of a five-year term, the current SGPC general body has served seven years in office after being elected in 2004.
Apart from that, the petition filed in 2004 on voting rights to Sehajdhari Sikhs is still in the courts, facing one or another adjournment. It may now finally be decided after the intervention of the Apex Court which directed the Punjab and Haryana High Court to decide the matter within a month’s time.
Marred by one delay after another, the SGPC cannot even constitute its ‘new’ general body and elect a new president till the election results are notified by the Commission.
Evading the reasons of delay, the officials at the Commission are claiming that the same delay also happened after the 2004 elections.
However, political analysts sense some lacuna in the delay. “It may be possible that the Commission has not yet got the directions from the Centre to release the results, and they might be indulging in delaying tactics as they want to see the High Court’s decision in the matter that is coming up for hearing on September 26,” said a senior Akali leader, requesting anonymity.
On the other hand, a senior Dal Khalsa leader told The Pioneer, “It may be possible that the SAD does not want the detailed results to come out as the winning margin is quite low as compared to the “big victory” projected by the Akalis. The narrow winning margins may give them some uncomfortable moments.”
While the Chief Commissioner of Gurdwara Elections retired Justice HS Brar was unavailable for comment, the officials available refused to volunteer answers over the reasons for delay in result announcement.
After more than a two-year delay in conducting the SGPC elections, and the issue of voting rights to the Sehajdhari Sikhs lingering in the corridors of justice, the Gurdwara Elections Commission (GEC) is now dilly-dallying in officially declaring the SGPC results.
As per the notification issued by the Commission, the results are to be declared on September 22, four days after the elections were held on September 18. But, now five days have lapsed, the Commission has not yet received the final result reports from all the constituencies by the concerned Presiding Officers, while the same were prepared on the same day the elections were held.
Till the filing of the report, a senior official at the Commission’s office stated that to date the list of around 70 seats had been received and the rest were still awaited.
The elections on September 18 took place after a two-year delay. Instead of a five-year term, the current SGPC general body has served seven years in office after being elected in 2004.
Apart from that, the petition filed in 2004 on voting rights to Sehajdhari Sikhs is still in the courts, facing one or another adjournment. It may now finally be decided after the intervention of the Apex Court which directed the Punjab and Haryana High Court to decide the matter within a month’s time.
Marred by one delay after another, the SGPC cannot even constitute its ‘new’ general body and elect a new president till the election results are notified by the Commission.
Evading the reasons of delay, the officials at the Commission are claiming that the same delay also happened after the 2004 elections.
However, political analysts sense some lacuna in the delay. “It may be possible that the Commission has not yet got the directions from the Centre to release the results, and they might be indulging in delaying tactics as they want to see the High Court’s decision in the matter that is coming up for hearing on September 26,” said a senior Akali leader, requesting anonymity.
On the other hand, a senior Dal Khalsa leader told The Pioneer, “It may be possible that the SAD does not want the detailed results to come out as the winning margin is quite low as compared to the “big victory” projected by the Akalis. The narrow winning margins may give them some uncomfortable moments.”
While the Chief Commissioner of Gurdwara Elections retired Justice HS Brar was unavailable for comment, the officials available refused to volunteer answers over the reasons for delay in result announcement.




