Now, ECIL says ‘cyber expert’ who claimed 2014 polls were rigged was not its employee

Syed Shuja had claimed he was part of a team at ECIL that was involved in the design and development of EVMs between 2009 to 2014.

January 22, 2019 07:09 pm | Updated December 04, 2021 10:39 pm IST - New Delhi

The self-proclaimed Indian cyber expert, who alleged that the 2014 general election was ‘rigged’, was not an employee of the Electronics Corporation of India Ltd. (ECIL) as claimed by him, the public sector undertaking said on Tuesday.

Addressing a press conference in London via Skype fro the United States, the man, identified as Syed Shuja, on January 21 claimed that the 2014 general election was rigged through the electronic voting machines (EVMs).

The EVMs are designed and developed by the ECIL. The Election Commission of India has already rejected the charges and asked the Delhi Police to lodge an FIR against Shuja.

Mr. Shuja had claimed he was part of a team at the ECIL that was involved in the design and development of EVMs between 2009 to 2014.

In a letter to Deputy Election Commissioner Sudeep Jain, the ECIL said that Mr. Shuja had neither been in the rolls of the ECIL as a regular employee nor was he in any way associated with EVMs.

“The records of this company have been verified and it is found that Mr. Syed Shuja has neither been in the rolls of ECIL as a regular employee nor was he in any way associated in the design and development of EVMs in ECIL produced between 2009 to 2014,” the letter by ECIL chairman and managing director Rear Adm. (retd.) Sanjay Chaudey said.

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