Hindustan Times (Jalandhar)

Independen­ts bag 217 seats, 81 go in BJP kitty

- HT Correspond­ent letterschd@hindustant­imes.com

SRINAGAR: As many as 217 block developmen­t council (BDC) seats in Jammu and Kashmir were won by independen­t candidates, 81 by the Bharatiya Janata Party (BJP) and eight by the J&K National Panthers Party, chief electoral officer (CEO) Shailendra Kumar said on Thursday. He said 98.3% voter turnout was recorded, with all major political parties, other than the BJP, staying away from the BDC elections because of continued detention of their leaders.

“Out of the 26,629 eligible panch and sarpanch, 98.3% voted to elect 310 chairperso­ns for their respective blocks,” the CEO said.

The poll percentage for the 10 districts in the Kashmir region was 93.65% and 99.4% for the 10 districts in the Jammu region, the CEO said.

For 309 posts of BDC chairperso­n posts, 1,012 candidates were in the fray in Jammu, Kashmir and Ladakh.

Earlier, BJP state spokespers­on Altaf Thakur said the party and its like-minded candidates have emerged victorious in more than 62 blocks in Kashmir. “The party emerged as the single largest party not only in Jammu but also in Kashmir,’’ he said.

Jammu and Kashmir Pradesh Congress president, Ghulam

Ahmad Mir said, “Participat­ing in these elections was useless as our entire leadership was either in jail or were not allowed to move out of Jammu. This was a ploy of the government to give the BJP a walkover in these polls.”

Panch and Sarpanch are elected by people at the village level. These representa­tives go on to elect chairperso­ns of Block Developmen­t Councils which are second tier organisati­on in the Panchayati Raj system.

The state has 316 blocks but elections were held in 283 blocks on Thursday. In 27 blocks, chairperso­ns were elected unopposed of which 15 were supported by the BJP.

Elections couldn’t take place in two blocks as they did not have an elected panch and sarpanch, while in four blocks reserved for women, there was no elected woman panch.

The panch and sarpanch in Srinagar were taken in a bus under security cover to facilitate them in polling and the district, which has been witnessing a tense atmosphere since August 5 when the state’s special status under Article 370 was abrogated by the Centre, saw 100% polling by 11am. The similar exercise was followed in all remaining districts in Kashmir, where terrorists have threatened to disrupt the democratic exercise.

 ??  ?? Sarpanches showing the indelible ink after casting their votes at a polling station in Chek Dara on the outskirts of Srinagar on Thursday. WASEEM ANDRABI/HT
Sarpanches showing the indelible ink after casting their votes at a polling station in Chek Dara on the outskirts of Srinagar on Thursday. WASEEM ANDRABI/HT

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