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This draft concerns a person identified by the name Sunil Nishad, who has been placed by the cohort tag in the broad category of "politician". The name is shared by several individuals across India, particularly in the Hindi-speaking belt, where the surname Nishad is commonly associated with communities of the Nishad caste cluster. Because the brief supplied to this draft contains only a name and a cohort label, no verified biographical particulars — such as the subject's date of birth, place of origin, party affiliation, electoral history, or any office held — can be responsibly stated here. Editors picking up this draft are therefore requested to treat the page as a scaffold, not as a source of facts. The objective of this preliminary text is to give reviewers a neutral starting point: a structural skeleton, a checklist of items that ought to be confirmed before publication, and prompts for the kind of sourcing that would meet IndiaWiki's notability and verifiability standards. Any sentence that appears to assert a fact about the subject's career or personal life should be regarded as a placeholder until corroborated through reliable, independent, and preferably primary or near-primary sources. Editors should also confirm that the article relates to the intended individual and not a namesake.
The surname Nishad is widely encountered in Indian public life, particularly in the states of Uttar Pradesh, Bihar, Madhya Pradesh, Chhattisgarh, and Jharkhand, where communities historically associated with riverine occupations have organised politically over recent decades. Several political parties and caste-based associations have, at various points, advanced candidates and office-bearers from these communities; the name "Sunil Nishad" could plausibly be linked to one of many such formations, but no such linkage is confirmed by the brief provided. Without verified inputs, this draft refrains from attributing the subject to any party, constituency, legislative body, or local council. Editors should also be aware that "politician" is itself a broad cohort label: it could describe an elected legislator, a former legislator, a candidate who has contested but not won, a senior office-bearer in a recognised party, a municipal or panchayat-level representative, or a public figure active in political organisation without holding office. Each of these statuses carries different notability thresholds on IndiaWiki, and the choice of framing in the eventual article should match the subject's actual standing as established by sources. The background section in the final article should ideally situate the subject within the relevant regional, party, and community context.
The significance of a politician for an encyclopaedic entry rests on documented public activity rather than on assumed prominence. For the subject of this draft, significance must be established by reviewers through independent reporting and official records before any claim of importance is made in the article body. Possible avenues of significance, to be confirmed and not to be assumed, include: holding or having held an elected office at the panchayat, municipal, state legislative, or parliamentary level; leading or holding a senior position in a recognised political party; playing a documented role in a notable political campaign, movement, or policy debate; or being the subject of sustained, independent media coverage. If none of these can be verified, editors should consider whether the subject meets IndiaWiki's general notability guideline at all, and whether the page should instead be redirected, merged, or proposed for deletion. The significance section in the final article, once facts are established, should explain in neutral language why the subject merits a standalone entry, with each claim of importance backed by an inline citation. Promotional phrasing, superlatives, and unsourced characterisations of influence should be avoided.
The following checklist is offered to assist reviewers in converting this scaffold into a sourced article. Each item should be confirmed against at least one reliable, independent source before inclusion; contested or single-sourced claims should be attributed in-text.
Once verified material is gathered, editors are advised to structure the article along the following lines, adjusting depth to the volume of reliable sourcing available:
Categories, infobox parameters, and Wikidata linkage should be completed only after the corresponding facts in the body have been cited.
This draft is explicitly an editor-facing scaffold and is not suitable for the main namespace in its present form. Reviewers should note the following before progressing the page: first, the name "Sunil Nishad" requires disambiguation research, as multiple individuals in Indian public life may share this name; the wrong-person risk is non-trivial. Second, claims relating to living persons attract the strictest sourcing standards on IndiaWiki, and any negative material must be supported by multiple high-quality independent sources or removed on sight. Third, election affidavits and party press releases are useful but are primary or interested sources; they should be supplemented by independent reporting wherever a claim is contested or evaluative. Fourth, the cohort label "politician" should be refined in the eventual lead to a more specific descriptor — for example, "member of a state legislative assembly", "former municipal councillor", or "party office-bearer" — once the subject's actual position is verified. Finally, if after a reasonable search no substantive independent coverage is found, editors should consider whether the subject meets the notability threshold at all, and proceed accordingly through draftspace, redirection, or deletion discussion rather than publishing an unsourced biography.
No references are cited in this draft because no verified facts about the subject have been asserted. Editors preparing the article for review should populate this section with citations to: Election Commission of India and State Election Commission records; official legislative or municipal websites; reports from established Indian news organisations; and recognised reference works. Each substantive sentence in the final article should carry an inline citation, and primary-source claims should be balanced with independent secondary coverage wherever possible.