Deccan Chronicle

EVM glitches hit hotspot bypolls

Complaints pour in from Maha, UP seats

- DC CORRESPOND­ENTS with agency inputs NEW DELHI, MAY 28

The crucial Lok Sabha seat of Kairana in western Uttar Pradesh saw over 54 per cent polling in the byelection held on Monday amid complaints of electronic voting machines (EVMs) malfunctio­ning even as voting was overall peaceful in the Jat-dominated region.

Apart from Kairana, byelection­s were held in three other Lok Sabha seats — BhandaraGo­ndiya and Palghar in Maharashtr­a and the lone seat of Nagaland.

Byelection­s were also held in 10 Assembly seats — Noorpur in Uttar Pradesh, Shahkot in Punjab, Jokihat in Bihar, Gomia and Silli in Jharkhand, Chengannur in Kerala, Palus Kadegaon in Maharashtr­a, Ampati in Meghalaya, Tharali in Uttarakhan­d and Maheshtala in West Bengal.

The results of all the byelection­s would be announced on May 31.

Large-scale reports of EVMs malfunctio­ning in Kairana and BhandaraGo­ndiya were reported by the leaders of all parties. The Election Commission later in the day assured that repolling would be held wherever necessary.

The EC said reports of “large-scale” failure of EVMs were an “exaggerate­d projection of reality” even as complaints mounted about problems with electronic voting machines, including in Kairana.

EC sources blamed the inept handling of the paper-trail machines for votes by the ground staff, specially when the temperatur­e was running high, for malfunctio­ning in some areas.

All eyes were, however, on Kairana where the BJP is facing the combined might of the Opposition.

The polls were necessitat­ed for this seat after the death of BJP MP Hukum Singh earlier this year, and the party fielded his daughter Mriganka Singh.

The crucial Lok Sabha seat of Kairana in western Uttar Pradesh saw over 54 per cent polling in the byelection held on Monday amid complaints of electronic voting machines (EVMs) malfunctio­ning even as voting was overall peaceful in the Jat-dominated region.

Her main rival is Tabassum Hasan, the candidate of Ajit Singh's Rashtriya Lok Dal, who is being supported by the Congress, Samajwadi Party and the BSP.

The BJP is keen to retain the seat specially in the aftermath of the drubbing it had got earlier this year in the bypolls held in two other Lok Sabha seats Gorakhpur and Phulpur, the seats held by chief minister Yogi Adityanath and deputy chief minister Keshav Prasad Maurya respective­ly.

It had lost both the seats to the Samajwadi Party.

Through its aggressive campaignin­g in Kairana, the BJP wants to convey the message that the twin defeats were an aberration. Also under focus are the two Lok Sabha constituen­cies of Maharashtr­a. The Shiv Sena has fielded late BJP MP Chintaman Wanaga's son Shriniwas Wanaga in Palghar, a decision which has not gone down well with the BJP, which has nominated Congress deserter Rajendra Gavit as its candidate.

In Bhandara-Gondiya, there is a direct contest between the BJP and Nationalis­t Congress Party (NCP). The BJP fielded Hemant Patle, a former MLA, while the NCP has fielded Madhukar Kukde.

In Karnataka, tight security and a changed political equation following the Congress-JD(S) alliance marked voting for the Rajarajesh­warinagar election, which was deferred earlier due to the seizure of 9,564 Election Photo ID Cards from an apartment during the recent Karnataka Assembly elections.

Even while voting was under way, the Opposition parties and the ruling BJP moved the EC in New Delhi claiming that “hundreds” of EVMs and paper trail machines deployed for the Kairana and Noorpur bypolls in UP had developed snags and were not replaced for hours.

 ?? — PTI ?? BJP MLA Suresh Rana, (4th from right), waits in a queue to cast his vote for Kairana parliament­ary constituen­cy bypolls in Shamli on Monday.
— PTI BJP MLA Suresh Rana, (4th from right), waits in a queue to cast his vote for Kairana parliament­ary constituen­cy bypolls in Shamli on Monday.
 ?? — PTI ?? Voters arrive at a polling station, during Kairana constituen­cy Assembly byelection, on Monday.
— PTI Voters arrive at a polling station, during Kairana constituen­cy Assembly byelection, on Monday.

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