Hindustan Times (Delhi)

Violence

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Voting took place on Sunday in all 13 Lok Sabha constituen­cies in Punjab and an equal number in Uttar Pradesh, nine in West Bengal, eight each in Bihar and Madhya Pradesh, four in Himachal Pradesh, three in Jharkhand, and the lone Chandigarh seat.

Violent clashes erupted during the final phase of the elections in West Bengal -- which recorded a turnout of 73.51% -despite the deployment of 710 companies of security personnel in the state that elects 42 lawmakers to the Lok Sabha, the most by a state after Uttar Pradesh (80) and Maharashtr­a (48).

Despite the election commission deploying 710 companies of security personnel in the state, reports of clashes poured in from all nine parliament­ary and four assembly constituen­cies that voted.

In Kakinara, a hamlet in the Bhatpara assembly constituen­cy, members of the Trinamool Congress (TMC) and the Bharatiya Janata Party (BJP), armed with crude bombs and bricks, clashed on the streets. Three police vehicles were ransacked and one was overturned. A few shops in the local market were set ablaze, prompting central security forces to baton-charge the rioters. Bhatpara is a prestigiou­s seat because incumbent and four-time MLA, Arjun Singh, switched from the TMC to the BJP and fought the Lok Sabha elections on a saffron party ticket.

TMC’S candidate in Barasat, Kakali Ghosh Dastidar, alleged that central forces personnel tore up banners of her party and chanted “Jai Shri Ram” slogans. The BJP candidate in Diamond Harbour, Nilanjan Roy, claimed that his car was vandalised in front of the police. Another car, belonging to a local BJP leader, was vandalised in Kolkata.

“Vote was rigged in all 51 booths here. State police and Mizoram Police were mute spectators,” said Anupam Hazra, BJP candidate in Jadavpur. Union minister and BJP candidate in Asansol, Babul Supriyo, faced “go back” slogans from voters in Jorasanko in north Kolkata when he went to cast his vote.

The poll campaign had to be cut short by a day in West Bengal after BJP and TMC supporters fought a pitched battle in Kolkata on Tuesday at a roadshow by BJP president Amit Shah. Vandals stormed a college and damaged a bust of Bengal Renaissanc­e icon and social reformer Ishwar Chandra Vidyasagar.

The stakes are high for both parties, with the BJP looking to West Bengal to offset possible reverses in its northern and western stronghold­s and TMC nursing ambitions of playing a role on the national political stage.

Punjab recorded a polling percentage of 59% in its 13 Lok Sabha constituen­cies. In the lone Chandigarh seat, 63.57% of the electorate turned out to vote .

A 28-year-old, reported to be a Congress worker, was killed in Hardo Sarli village in the border constituen­cy of Khadoor Sahib when he was attacked with a sharp weapon by three men of the same village following a row over casting of votes in favour of a party. The police registered a case of murder, but denied any link with the elections.

In Talwandi Sabo, a case was registered against Congress leader Khushbash Jatana for firing gunshots and injuring three Akali workers, forcing election staff to stop polling. Another clash was in Kangar village of Faridkot constituen­cy where a group of people stoned the car of former Akali minister Sikandar Singh Maluka, who escaped unhurt. In minor clashes in Ludhiana, Sangrur, Fatehgarh Sahib and Faridkot segments, 12 persons were injured. In a freak incident, a polling agent died of a heart attack in Shahpur Patti village in Jalandhar.

Reports of technical glitches in EVMS came in from several places in Punjab, including Ludhiana, Samana and Moga. Punjab’s chief electoral officer S Karuna Raju said eight ballot units, 13 control units, and eight voterverif­ied paper audit trail machines had been replaced.

In Uttar Pradesh, the country’s most populous state, the turnout was 55.52%. In Varanasi, the prime minister’s constituen­cy, the turnout was 53.38%. Gorakhpur, a seat previously held by chief minister Yogi Adityanath and which the BJP lost in a by-poll last year, recorded a voter turnout of 56.47%.

Violence erupted in the Chandauli Lok Sabha constituen­cy, where state BJP chief Mahendra Nath Pandey is seeking re-election, when supporters of the saffron party and the Samajwadi Party clashed.

Bihar recorded a turnout of 53.36%. “Going by reports that reached us from district headquarte­rs, we have found out that the voting process was temporaril­y hampered at few polling stations in Ara, Sasaram, Jehanabad, Patliputra and Buxar,” a Bihar election official said. “Officials have attended to the complaints and redressed all grievances.”

In neighbouri­ng Jharkhand, an estimated 70.97 of the electorate exercised their franchise in three Lok Sabha seats. In Madhya Pradesh, a turnout of 69.36% was recorded and in Himachal Pradesh, 66.7% of the voters exercised their franchise.

An average of 66.88% voters exercised their franchise in the last six phases. The entire electoral exercise was spread over 38 days. occur in these areas over the next few years. We need a precaution­ary approach to city planning not post approval fixes,” she said.

The Union government is proposing to build over 25,000 flats for government employees in seven neighbourh­oods, which is in addition to the 4,700 flats that have already been built in East Kidwai Nagar.

But the eight redevelopm­ent projects have become a major cause of concern over three key issues — impact on environmen­t, traffic management and water supply. Last year, the project came under fire after HT reported that the original project proposal called for the felling more than 16,000 trees in south Delhi. The HT report prompted a massive citizens’ movement against tree felling and two separate court cases, one of which ordered fresh designs for the project. A report submitted to the Delhi high court stated that the increased traffic load in the area could result in congestion on Ring Road and Aurobindo Road. Meanwhile, concerns about water supply to the complex have also been raised by the high court, which has asked the concerned agencies to explain how water requiremen­ts would be met.

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