Hindustan Times (Chandigarh)

Alltime high turnout of 74.6% in Himachal polls

NEW RECORD Women lead the surge, previous record was 74.5% in 2003 elections, VVPAT snags in 218 booths

- Navneet Sharma and Gaurav Bisht

SHIMLA: People in Himachal Pradesh came out in droves on Thursday to pick the new assembly, with the hill state witnessing a record 74.6% turnout amid reports of widespread glitches in voting machines on an otherwise peaceful day.

The high poll percentage, which is more than the previous high of 74.51% in the 2003 assembly polls, reflects the strong interest among the 50.25 lakh voters in the hard-fought election between two arch-rivals, the Congress and the Bharatiya Janata Party (BJP). In keeping with the state’s history, women voters also turned up in large numbers.

Chief electoral officer Pushpendra Rajput told HT that 74.6% voter turnout was registered. He said the highest voter turnout of 82% was reported in Sirmaur district having five assembly segments. Hamirpur district, which has five constituen­cies, registered the lowest polling percentage at 69.5%.

As many as 337 candidates are in the fray for 68 assembly seats, the results of which would be declared on December 18 along with those for Gujarat, where election will be held in two phases in December.

Chief minister Virbhadra Singh, eyeing a seventh term, and BJP’S CM candidate Prem Kumar Dhumal were among the first to cast their vote in the state that hasn’t returned a government in the last 30 years.

But the star of the day was independen­t India’s first voter, 100-year-old Shyam Saran Negi. A red carpet was rolled out for the retired school teacher who exercised his right in Kalpa in Kinnaur district that borders Tibet. Negi entered the history books when he became first Indian to cast his vote in the 1951 Lok Sabha election. Negi has voted in 16 parliament­ary and 13 state elections.

His enthusiasm seems to have rubbed off even though voting got off to a slow start. Only 13.72% voting was reported in the first two hours but it picked up to reach 28.6% till noon. It touched 54% at 2 pm and touched the 74% mark at 5 pm. Voting went well beyond the 5 pm deadline with long queues outside more than 600 polling booths.

High polling was reported from Banjar, Balh, Doon, Siraj, Una, Nalagarh, Shilai, Chopal, Lahaul and Spiti, Kinnaur and Jubbal Kotkhai assembly segments where the BJP and the Congress were either locked in a fierce fight. In some of these assembly segments, rebels and independen­t candidates made the contest triangular.

The brisk day of polling was marred by snags in voting machines at several places. The voter-verifiable paper audit trail (VVPAT) machines – a verificati­on printer device attached to EVMS – developed snags at 218 booths, delaying polling. Also, 101 ballot units and 67 control units had problems.

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