Hindustan Times (Delhi)

In ‘sensitive’ areas, voters determined to make it count

- Sweta Goswami & Abhishek Dey htreporter­s@hindustant­imes.com

nNEW DELHI: Friday’s namaz at the Idgah mosque in northeast Delhi’s Jafarabad Idgah was slightly different. The imam followed up the sermon with an appeal to the people to vote in large numbers on Saturday.

“Make sure that you vote,” he said, adding that residents in the locality – which comes under the Seelampurc­onstituenc­y–should not be deterred by “gunfire incidents”. The imam was referring to an incident that took place around 1.30pm -- the same time when Friday prayers began in different mosques in the area -- in which two gunmen fired four rounds near a shop in the area, even as every nook and cranny of the constituen­cy was guarded by a large posse of police personnel and officers of the Central Armed Police Force.

Though no person was injured in the firing, local residents were anxious about it. A large number of them, however, maintained that they will vote in large numbers for reasons that range from education to civic issues.

“We will not be scared. We will vote in large numbers because our children need better education. We need a leader who can make that possible,” said 43-yearold Rabia Khan, a resident of New Seelampur locality.

“We also expect that this election brings an end to sewer problems and we start getting cleaner water in our neighbourh­ood,” said Intekhab Khan, 60, a resident of Jafarabad in Seelampur constituen­cy, which had recorded a voter turnout of around 71.81% in the 2015 polls.

In the run up to the 2020 polls, Seelampur witnessed violent protests against the Citizenshi­p Amendment Act (CAA) and so has Delhi’s Jamia Nagar, which comes under the Okhla constituen­cy in East Delhi parliament­ary segment.

Okhla has also hit the headlines for the ongoing anticaa protest at Shaheen Bagh – that also grabbed centrestag­e in Delhi’s political campaigns in the run up to the February 8 polls.

Together, these two constituen­cies have around 260 polling stations that have been marked as “critical” or “sensitive” by the election commission. There are 3,841 polling booths in 516 polling locations across all 70 constituen­cies in Delhi. Polling locations designated as ‘sensitive’ are guarded by larger number of security personnel. In 2015, as many as 715 polling locations were marked either “critical” or “sensitive”.

Residents across localities in Okhla also claimed that they too would vote in large numbers – some of them said that they would keep in mind a “national crisis” in the light of the anti-caa protests in Shaheen Bagh, others claimed that they would vote to register their protest against the Shaheen Bagh protest. Many, however, said they would stick to civic issues – water, sewer, roads, schools and health care.

“People are anxious across the nation with the citizenshi­p law and related issues. It is important to vote and people understand that better today,” said 25-yearold Amreen, a corporate executive who lives in Abul Fazl Enclave, a locality in Okhla constituen­cy, which had recorded 60.91% voter turnout in 2015 assembly polls.

Sahi Ram, 47, a resident of Madanpur Khadar in Okhla constituen­cy, said: “These are strange times. A group of people have blocked an arterial road for nearly two months now. We need to vote for a leader who can assert that there is no place for such anarchy.”

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