New Delhi: Hearing petitions challenging the Bihar ‘special intensive revision’ of electoral rolls conducted by the Election Commission over a month’s time ahead of the assembly polls in the state, the Supreme Court said today that people who have been left out of the draft rolls can submit their applications online and that Aadhaar is a permissible document to submit for inclusion.At the last hearing, the Supreme Court has asked the Election Commission to publish on its website the list of names excluded from the draft electoral rolls, along with the reasons for deletion and also to include Aadhaar to the list of documents accepted for the exercise.LiveLaw reported that a bench of Justices Surya Kant and Joymalya Bagchi also directed the 12 recognised political parties in Bihar to instruct their booth-level agents to assist people in their respective booths in submitting forms.Petitions challenging the process had been filed by no fewer than 10 organisations and individuals, many of whom are leaders of opposition parties. The apex court today impleaded all 12 recognised parties as respondents, including those who were not petitioners in the matter.To the court’s expression of surprise that only two objections were filed by 1.6 lakh booth-level agents, political parties noted that several agents were not being permitted to submit their objections. The court noted this.“They are only whipping up fear for their political interests,” senior advocate Rakesh Dwivedi, for the Election Commission of India, told the court.The court also directed booth-level officers to acknowledge receipt wherever physical forms are submitted.Among other subjects, senior advocate Gopal Sankaranarayanan, for the Association for Democratic Reforms, said that the legality of the exercise itself must be decided.