Hindustan Times ST (Jaipur)

EVMs locked, over to counting day

- Pankaj Jaiswal, Sudhir Kumar, Utpal Parashar and Sobhapati Samom letters@hindustant­imes.com

FATE SEALED The final day of voting in UP, Manipur signal the end of sevenphase poll exercise with all eyes now set on result day

People in eastern Uttar Pradesh and Manipur voted on Wednesday, ending the month-long assembly polls in five states on a high note.

The second and final round of elections for 22 seats in Manipur recorded 86% voter turnout, which is equivalent of figures from the first phase of polling for 38 seats.

In UP, the turnout for the seventh phase was 60.03%. The figure is likely to be updated by the Election Commission when it makes the final calculatio­n.

The final phase was the smallest in UP with 40 constituen­cies spread over seven districts, including Prime Minister Narendra Modi’s parliament­ary constituen­cy, Varanasi.

The BJP had put maximum efforts to win the five seats within Modi’s Lok Sabha constituen­cy. The PM camped in Varanasi for three days, while about 20 ministers from his council canvassed in the region.

The BJP faces a stiff challenge from the Samajwadi Party and Congress, which are contesting the polls as allies, and the BSP of four-time CM Mayawati.

In Manipur, the BJP is looking to defeat the Congress, which has been ruling the state for the past 15 years.

The final phase pitted threeterm chief minister Okram Ibobi Singh against human rights activist Irom Sharmila, who is contesting against him from Thoubal. “We will get a clear mandate. This election is something like a referendum, both in the hills and the valley,” Singh said after casting his vote. “We will get at least 36 seats.”

Sharmila, contesting on a PRJA ticket, went to most polling stations in the constituen­cy and interacted with voters. “The response from the people is positive,” she said.

The voter response in Varanasi is mixed. Many of them rooted for chief minister Akhilesh Yadav, who is also the Samajwadi national president. Others preferred Modi. “Candidates hardly matter to me. I voted for Modi since he promises developmen­t and has started various developmen­t projects in Varnasi. If the BJP comes to power, developmen­t will flow in Varanasi,” said a shopkeeper in the temple town by the Ganga.

Voting caught pace by noon. By 3 pm, the turnout crossed the 50% mark. Barring sporadic incidents, no major violence was reported from any booth.

Manipur recorded long queues

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