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Sunil Arora

Overview

This draft is an editor-facing scaffold for an IndiaWiki entry on a person identified by the title Sunil Arora, listed under the cohort of politician. It is not intended for direct publication. The purpose of this document is to give human editors a neutral starting body that they can fact-check, expand, and rewrite before the entry is considered fit for the encyclopaedia. Because the brief supplies only a name and a broad cohort, this draft deliberately avoids asserting biographical specifics such as date of birth, place of origin, party affiliation, constituency, offices held, electoral record, or any honours. The name Sunil Arora is shared by more than one public figure in India, and editors must therefore begin by establishing which individual the article is meant to cover before any concrete details are added. Until that disambiguation is performed, every factual placeholder in this draft should be read as a prompt for verification rather than as a settled claim. The sections that follow set out neutral context, an editorial checklist, a recommended article structure, and notes on tone, sourcing, and potential conflicts with IndiaWiki's biographical-living-persons guidance.

Background

The cohort label politician in the Indian context covers a wide spectrum of public roles: members of Parliament, members of state legislative assemblies and councils, office-bearers of recognised national or state political parties, ministers at the Union or state level, members of local self-government bodies such as municipal corporations and panchayats, and individuals who have contested elections without necessarily winning office. It can also extend, in popular usage, to former civil servants who have entered electoral politics after retirement. Editors should determine, on the basis of reliable secondary sources, which of these roles applies to the subject of this article and during which periods. The Indian political landscape is shaped by a multi-party system at the national level, by distinct regional party formations in many states, and by coalition arrangements that frequently shift between elections. Any biographical entry on a politician should therefore situate the subject within this wider institutional context, while taking care not to attribute to the subject views, votes, or affiliations that have not been documented in published sources. This draft does not specify the subject's party, ideological orientation, or career arc, and editors should fill these in only after careful sourcing.

Significance

The significance of a political biography on IndiaWiki depends on whether the subject meets the project's notability criteria for politicians, which typically require that the individual has held a significant elected or appointed office, has received substantial coverage in independent and reliable secondary sources, or has played a clearly documented role in public life beyond routine party activity. Editors working on this draft should first satisfy themselves that the subject in question clears that threshold; otherwise, the article may be a candidate for merging, redirection, or deletion rather than expansion. If the subject is found to be notable, the entry should explain in neutral terms why the person is of encyclopaedic interest: for instance, the offices they have demonstrably held, the policy areas with which their name is publicly associated, or the elections in which they have been a documented participant. The article should avoid promotional framing, hagiography, or unsourced criticism. Significance should be shown through the weight of citations rather than asserted through adjectives, and contested aspects of the subject's career should be presented with attribution to the sources that discuss them.

Common topics for editors to verify

The following checklist is offered as a practical guide. None of the items below should be treated as facts about the subject; each is a prompt for independent verification against reliable sources before inclusion.

  • Full legal name, any commonly used variants, and the correct spelling in English and, where relevant, in Indic scripts.
  • Disambiguation from other public figures who share the name, including any namesakes in administration, politics, business, or the arts.
  • Date and place of birth, and, if applicable and reliably reported, date and place of death.
  • Family background only to the extent that it is covered in reliable secondary sources and is relevant to the subject's public role.
  • Educational qualifications, with institution names and time periods supported by citations.
  • Pre-political career, if any, including any service in the civil services, the private sector, academia, or civil society.
  • Entry into politics: party joined, year, and the circumstances as reported in independent sources.
  • Elected offices contested and held, with constituencies, terms, and electoral margins drawn from official records such as the Election Commission of India.
  • Appointed offices, ministerial portfolios, parliamentary committee memberships, or party organisational positions.
  • Documented policy positions, legislative initiatives, or public statements, attributed to the source in which they were reported.
  • Any controversies, legal proceedings, or allegations, included only when reported by multiple reliable outlets and presented with due weight, neutrality, and attribution, in accordance with the policy on biographies of living persons.
  • Honours, awards, or recognitions from credible institutions, with citations.
  • Published writings, interviews, or speeches that have been reported on by secondary sources.

Editors should be especially cautious with claims circulating on social media, partisan websites, or unverified user-generated content. Where sources disagree, the article should reflect the disagreement rather than pick a side.

Suggested structure for the final article

Once the subject has been disambiguated and basic facts verified, the published entry could follow a structure along these lines:

  1. Lead paragraph: a concise, neutral summary identifying the subject, their nationality, their principal role, and the reason for their notability, all supported by citations later in the body.
  2. Early life and education: family background and schooling, only to the extent reliably sourced.
  3. Early career: any professional activity prior to entering politics.
  4. Political career: organised chronologically or by office, covering party affiliations, elections contested, offices held, and notable initiatives.
  5. Policy positions and public stances: documented views on specific issues, attributed to dated sources.
  6. Controversies, if any: a balanced section, included only where supported by multiple independent sources.
  7. Personal life: kept brief and limited to what the subject has acknowledged publicly or what is reliably reported.
  8. Legacy or assessment: only if the subject's career is sufficiently advanced or concluded for such commentary to exist in secondary sources.
  9. See also, References, and External links.

Sub-headings should be kept descriptive and neutral, and the tone throughout should be encyclopaedic rather than journalistic or advocacy-driven.

Editorial notes

This draft has been written in deliberately general terms because the input provided only a name and a cohort. Editors should not treat any sentence here as a factual claim about a specific individual. Before publication, the following steps are recommended: first, confirm which person named Sunil Arora is intended; second, gather a working bibliography of independent, reliable sources, preferably including reputable Indian newspapers, books from established publishers, and official government records; third, draft each section with inline citations rather than relying on memory or general knowledge; fourth, apply the policy on biographies of living persons strictly, removing any contentious material that is poorly sourced; and fifth, have the draft reviewed by at least one other editor familiar with Indian political coverage before it goes live. If at any stage it becomes clear that reliable sourcing is thin, it is preferable to publish a short, well-cited stub than a long entry padded with weak material. Tone should remain neutral, Indian English spellings should be used consistently, and honorifics such as Shri or Hon'ble should be avoided in the article body.

References

No references are cited in this draft because no specific factual claims have been made about the subject. Editors preparing the published version should add citations to independent, reliable secondary sources for every substantive statement, following IndiaWiki's standard referencing style. Useful starting points typically include the official website of the Election Commission of India for electoral data, the websites of the Lok Sabha and Rajya Sabha for parliamentary records where applicable, archived reports from established Indian newspapers and news agencies, and biographical works from reputable publishers. Self-published material, partisan pamphlets, and unverified online posts should not be used as sources for biographical facts.