Millennium Post

Municipal poll process ends in J&K with overall 35.1 % turnout

- OUR CORRESPOND­ENT

SRINAGAR: The four-phase polling for all 79 urban local bodies in Jammu and Kashmir ended Tuesday, recording an overall 35.1 per cent voter turnout in the state.

The turnout for the final phase of elections, which was held only for two municipal bodies in Kashmir, remained

low as usual at 4.2 per cent. "The overall voting percentage for the urban local bodies of the state was 35.1 per cent," said an election department official, adding the turnout for the final phase, held only for two municipal bodies in valley was 4.2 percent.

A total of 35.1 percent people, numbering around 5.97

lakh out of nearly 17 lakh voters exercised their franchise during the entire four-phase electoral process, held amid tight security with even candidates' identities having been kept secret due to militant threats. While the valley voters largely gave a cold shoulder to the polls, boycotted by the two major regional players NC and PDP, Jammu and Ladakh regions saw massive participat­ion of people in the poll process.

The counting of votes will be held on October 20.

According to election officials, the first phase of polling for civic bodies on October 8 recorded 65 percent voter turnout in Jammu division and 62.1 per cent in Leh and Kargil districts of Ladakh. The valley, however saw a meagre 8.2 per cent electorate­s casting their votes that day.

In the second phase of polling held on 10 October, Jammu division civic bodies went one notch higher, clocking a poll percentage of 78.6 per cent but the municipal bodies in Kashmir registered a measly 3.4 per cent turnout.

The third phase was almost a repeat of the second one with Jammu division registerin­g 81.4 per cent turnout against a paltry 3.5 per cent poll percentage in Kashmir.

The valley witnessed no signs of electionee­ring in run up to the polls as militant outfits had threatened to target those taking part in the elections in any form while separatist groups like Hurriyat Conference had called for a boycott. The election authoritie­s kept secret even the identities of the contesting candidates owing to the security threat to them, prompting political parties, which were against the conduct of polls in the present circumstan­ces, to question the authentici­ty of the process.

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