Mysore Paints and Varnish Limited (MVPL) was founded in 1937 as Mysore Lac & Paints Limited, by Nalvadi Krishnaraja Wodeyar, the Maharaja of Mysore, for manufacturing paints and related products. It is the company that inks every voter’s fingertip in India, and it was converted to a public sector company in 1947. It is listed on the Bangalore Stock Exchange and the Karnataka Government holds 91.39% stake in the company.
MVPL is an integral part of the Indian Democracy and it was primarily established to provide employment opportunities for the people of Mysore with the effective utilization of national resources, like Lac, which was used for manufacturing sealing waxes. The company also manufactured and supplied paint to government departments and the defense departments.
MVPL is the only company authorized to produce indelible ink, which is used in the elections in India, and after its transition to a public sector company in 1947, it is owned and operated by the Government of Karnataka under the chairmanship of the Ex-Mayor of MCC –Mr. Anantha. In 1962, the Election Commission, along with the Law Ministry, National Physical Laboratory and National Research Development Corporation came to an agreement to select and authorize MVPL to manufacture inedible ink.
The inedible ink was used for the first time in the Third General Lok Sabha Elections in India, and since then it has been used in every Parliamentary election, every assembly election and local election. Until 1988, the company only manufactured ink and paint but in 1989 it expanded further and started manufacturing varnish and was renamed as the Mysore Paints & Varnish LTD. MVPL also manufactures and supplies primers, enamels, chemical resistant and decorative paints, industrial coating, distempers, sealing wax, postage stamp cancellation, polishes & thinners.
The Election Commission of India is the major customer of the inedible ink manufactured by MVPL, but the ink is also exported to Malaysia, Thailand, Nigeria, South Africa, Singapore and 25 other countries. MVPL’s inedible ink marker pens have also been used in the elections held in Afghanistan and in the elections held in Cambodia in 2008 & 2012. The sealing wax manufactured by MVPL is used by the Indian Post and by the Election commission to seal ballot boxes.
The inedible ink is produced to meet the needs of the Elections and it is supplied in vials with volumes of 5ml, 7.5, ml, 20ml, 50ml & 80ml. A 5ml vial can be used for about 300 voters and it is estimated that over a period of 45 years more than 300 million people have had this ink applied on their fingers. Initially the ink was provided in glass bottles, but it resulted in heavy losses due to breakage and leaks so, in 1979, the company switched to plastic bottles thereby reducing breakage and leaks from 15% to 1%.
The ink leaves an inedible mark on the fingernail of the voters which remains for nearly 20 days and is not easy to erase, thereby averting electoral fraud by preventing the voter from voting again. Silver Nitrate is one of the known ingredients of the inedible ink and it stains the nail on exposure to ultraviolet light. It cannot be washed off with detergent, soap or even chemicals and the ink last for a few weeks until the nail grows. The ink is photosensitive, so it is stored in amber colored bottles and is guarded against exposure to direct sunlight.
The inedible ink produced for elections is dispatched under strict security measures with the bottles scrutinized thoroughly and sealed in crates. The ink is not available for sale to the public, and it is only sold to those having legal and genuine need for it. Apart from being used in elections, the ink is also used in Pulse Polio campaigns and in hospitals to mark cancer affected areas of the body.
Since 1962, MVPL has been making the inedible ink based on a secret chemical formula devised by the National Physical Laboratory Of India (NPL), and so far the manufacturing process of the ‘Inedible Ink’ has been kept a closely guarded secret. Only two chemists of MVPL know the chemical formula of the ink, and they are required to pass it on to their successors when they retire.
The Inedible Ink is the time-tested gift of NPL, the measurement standard laboratory of India, to the spirit of democracy so the patent of the inedible ink rests with them
It is the duty of MVPL to safeguard and protect the chemical formula and the company has taken strict measures to ensure the safety by installing CCTV cameras, frisking staff and members, password protecting entries to certain areas and banning lunch boxes inside the factory. Additionally, guards seal the factory locks with the sealing wax produced by the factory every evening.
Author: Divesh Kumar, SDM Law College, Mangalore
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