Overview
This draft is an internal scaffold prepared for IndiaWiki editors who intend to develop a biographical article on a person identified by the name Sunil Khatri, described in the cohort information as a politician. The draft has been prepared without access to verified primary or secondary sources, and accordingly it does not assert any biographical particulars such as dates, party affiliations, constituencies, offices held, electoral outcomes, or personal background. It is intended strictly as a working framework that human editors can populate with information once reliable references have been obtained, cross-checked, and cited in accordance with IndiaWiki's sourcing standards.
Sunil Khatri is a relatively common Indian name, and editors should take particular care to confirm that the subject of the article is clearly distinguishable from other public figures who may share the same or a similar name. Disambiguation will be a key concern at every stage of drafting. Until verified material is added, this scaffold deliberately avoids attributing any specific role, region, or period of activity to the subject. Editors are encouraged to treat each section below as a prompt for further research rather than as a source of factual claims, and to rewrite the prose substantially before any version is considered for publication.
Background
Within the broad cohort of Indian politicians, individuals can occupy a wide range of positions across local, state and national tiers of governance. Without reliable sources, the present draft cannot place Sunil Khatri at any particular tier, nor can it identify the political formation, ideological tradition, or geographical base associated with the subject. Editors developing this article should begin by establishing these foundational coordinates: the level at which the subject has primarily been politically active, the party or parties associated with the subject's career, and the constituency, region or organisational unit in which the subject has been most visible.
The surname Khatri is found across several regions of India, including parts of North India, Western India and the Indo-Gangetic plains, and it carries varied community associations depending on context. Editors should resist drawing conclusions about the subject's regional or community background purely on the basis of the surname; such inferences can be misleading and are not appropriate for a neutral encyclopaedic biography. Likewise, the given name Sunil is widely used across linguistic regions, and offers no reliable signal of place of origin. All such background details must be sourced from credible references such as official election filings, parliamentary or assembly records, party publications, or established news organisations.
Significance
The significance of any politician within an encyclopaedic context generally depends on factors such as the offices they have held, the policies or legislative initiatives with which they have been associated, the elections they have contested or won, the public debates they have shaped, and the institutions or movements they have led or represented. Because none of these particulars can be responsibly stated for the subject of this draft on the basis of the title and cohort alone, the question of significance must be treated as open until research is completed.
Editors should keep in mind IndiaWiki's general notability expectations for political figures. These typically include verifiable evidence of holding elected or appointed public office at a sufficiently prominent level, sustained coverage in independent reliable sources, or a clearly documented role in significant political events. If, after research, the subject does not appear to meet such thresholds, editors should consider whether a standalone article is warranted or whether the material would be better incorporated into a related article on a party, constituency or movement. This evaluation should precede substantive drafting of the public-facing version.
Common topics for editors to verify
The following checklist sets out areas that editors will typically need to verify before writing the public-facing article. Each item should be supported by at least one independent, reliable source, and contentious or biographical claims should ideally be supported by multiple sources.
- Full legal name, including any commonly used variants, transliterations or honorifics, and confirmation that the subject is distinct from other public figures bearing similar names.
- Date and place of birth, and, where relevant and reliably reported, family background, education and pre-political occupation.
- Entry into political life, including the year, the party or organisation joined, and the circumstances or motivations as documented by reliable sources.
- Electoral history, including constituencies contested, years of contest, parties represented, and outcomes, drawn from official Election Commission records where possible.
- Public offices held, whether legislative, executive, organisational or advisory, with dates of tenure and the appointing authority.
- Policy positions, legislative work, committee memberships or notable public statements, presented neutrally and with attribution.
- Affiliations with civic, social, cultural or professional bodies outside formal political structures.
- Any controversies, legal proceedings or allegations, which must be handled with particular care, attributed to specific sources, and described in measured language consistent with the presumption of innocence.
- Recognition or honours, only where formally conferred and reliably reported.
- Current status, including whether the subject remains politically active.
Where a particular fact cannot be confirmed, the appropriate editorial response is omission rather than speculation. Place-holder text and unsourced approximations should not be carried over into any version intended for readers.
Suggested structure for the final article
Once verified material has been gathered, editors may consider organising the article along the following lines, adapting the structure to suit the actual contours of the subject's career:
- Lead section: a concise summary identifying the subject, the cohort, and the principal reasons for notability, written in plain and neutral prose.
- Early life and education: family background, schooling and higher education, included only to the extent that reliable sources are available.
- Early career: any professional, civic or organisational activity preceding entry into electoral or party politics.
- Political career: a chronological account of party membership, candidacies, offices held, and prominent initiatives, broken into sub-sections by phase or office where useful.
- Public positions and views: documented stances on policy or public questions, presented with attribution and balance.
- Controversies and legal matters: if applicable, treated with restraint, neutral framing and careful sourcing.
- Personal life: only such details as have been openly discussed in reliable sources and are relevant to public understanding.
- Legacy or current activity: as appropriate to the subject's stage of career.
- See also, References, and External links.
The lead should be written or rewritten last, after the body has stabilised, to ensure that it accurately summarises the article rather than introducing claims unsupported elsewhere.
Editorial notes
This draft has been generated as a scaffold and is not suitable for publication in its present form. Reviewers should treat every section as provisional and should not assume that any phrasing here reflects verified information about the subject. Particular caution is warranted on the following points. First, disambiguation: editors must establish clearly which Sunil Khatri is being written about, and add a hatnote or disambiguation page if other notable individuals share the name. Second, neutrality: political biographies are prone to partisan framing, and the final article should employ measured language, avoid promotional or pejorative tone, and attribute opinions to their sources. Third, biographies-of-living-persons considerations: if the subject is living, contentious material must be removed immediately if it is poorly sourced, and any allegation must be attributed and contextualised. Fourth, sourcing hierarchy: official records, established news organisations and peer-reviewed work should be preferred over partisan outlets, social media, and self-published material. Finally, editors should record their research trail in the talk page so that subsequent reviewers can assess the basis for each claim and continue improving the article systematically.
References
No references are cited in this scaffold because no verified sources have been consulted. Editors are requested to add citations to independent, reliable sources for every substantive claim before the article is considered for publication. Suggested categories of source to consult include official Election Commission of India records, proceedings of the relevant legislature, archives of established Indian newspapers and news agencies, publications of recognised research institutions, and, where appropriate, scholarly works on Indian politics. Each citation should include sufficient bibliographic detail to allow verification by another editor.