Jaipur, Jan. 16 -- Rajasthan Congress president Govind Singh Dotasra and Leader of Opposition Tikaram Jully accused the Bharatiya Janata Party (BJP) on Thursday of large-scale irregularities in the special intensive revision (SIR) of electoral rolls. They alleged thousands of forms, without signatures or mobile numbers names, appeared overnight to manipulate the list. Addressing the media at the party's state office in Jaipur, Dotasra claimed the BJP deposited thousands of forms with fake signatures at every sub-divisional office (SDO) on January 14. He alleged these forms were filled at BJP offices and submitted in bulk without verification. "These forms do not have signatures or mobile numbers. In every assembly constituency, 1,000 to 7,000 forms were submitted overnight," he said. Election rules set January 15 as the last date for claims after draft roll publication, Dotasra noted. Booth level officers (BLOs) and booth level agents (BLAs) may submit only up to 10 forms daily, with online recording shared with the Election Commission. "Under which rule did the BJP submit thousands of forms in a single day?" he questioned, adding that none carried BLO signatures. Dotasra demanded the Election Commission disclose forms submitted on January 14 and 15. BJP representatives' request for unlimited submissions was rejected, he noted. "Now they have found a new way to create irregularities. The Election Commission must disclose how many forms for addition and deletion were submitted on these two days," he said. Following Union home minister Amit Shah's and BJP general secretary BL Santosh's recent Jaipur visit, ministers and leaders targeted Congress supporters' names for deletion, Dotasra alleged. "Pen drives were distributed from the Chief Minister's Residence. Pre-printed forms were prepared at BJP offices and directly submitted to SDO offices," he said. BJP leaders threatened SDOs and BLOs with transfers if they refused. "They are being forced to add up to 50 names at a single booth and to delete names of Congress-supported voters," he added. Dotasra accused the BJP of a "data-mining-based authoritarian approach" using Delhi-procured data via a private agency to target social media critics, protesters, Aravalli activists, and policy opponents. "Assembly-wise data of such critics has been prepared and tasks have been given to delete their names from the voter list," he claimed. He added that officials allegedly were pressurised, offered no answers on the bulk form legality, and some district collectors claimed municipal elections would use the old list. "Once the new voter list is published on February 25, how can elections be conducted using the old list?" he asked. Congress would not spare wrongdoers, Dotasra warned. "If the BJP, intoxicated by power, has committed irregularities, we will not let them go. Congress workers will strongly oppose this. Officials working under BJP pressure should remain alert," he said. BJP spokesperson Ram Lal Sharma dismissed the claims as baseless. The election department follows legal processes allowing anyone to report irregularities, he said. Both parties' BLAs prevent wrongful changes. Congress raised accusations only to stay in the news, Sharma added....