The Borneo Post (Sabah)

India cancels poll in southern area over ‘vote buying’

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NEW DELHI: Indian election authoritie­s have cancelled voting in a southern region of the country after seizing more than 110 million rupees (US$1.5 million) they believe was meant to influence the outcome, officials said yesterday.

It is the first time a ballot has been cancelled in a national election over attempted votebuying, officials said.

The decision comes as Indians vote in a mammoth national election being held over several phases, the next of which begins today.

But voters in the Vellore constituen­cy in coastal Tamil Na du state will not be going to the polls as scheduled after the Election Commission of India ruled there were fears of a “systematic design to influence voters”.

The ruling came after authoritie­s seized more than 110 million rupees from a candidate in the run-up to the vote.

The commission said late Tuesday that the environmen­t in Vellore was no longer conducive to “free and ethical” elections.

No fresh date has been announced for polling in the constituen­cy.

Nearly 100 constituen­cies in 13 states go to the polls today in the second round of the seven-phase election that began on April 11.

Almost 900 million voters are eligible to cast their votes to elect 543 members to the lower house of the parliament, with results expected on May 23.

Attempts to secure votes in return for cash, liquor, electronic gadgets and even goats have been reported across Tamil Nadu in the run-up to voting.

More than 1.3 billion rupees (US$18.7 million) and one tonne of gold worth 3 billion rupees have been seized in the state since the poll dates were announced on March 10.

Elsewhere in the country, polls have been delayed by five days in parts of the northeaste­rn state of Tripura over security fears.

Polls will be held there on April 23 instead of today. — AFP

 ?? — AFP photo ?? Indian poll station workers transporti­ng Electronic Voting Machines (EVM) and Voter-Verified Paper Audit Trail (VVPAT) machines with a horse arrive at the remote high altitude Darjeeling constituen­cy polling station at a primary school in Srikhola near the India-Nepal border.
— AFP photo Indian poll station workers transporti­ng Electronic Voting Machines (EVM) and Voter-Verified Paper Audit Trail (VVPAT) machines with a horse arrive at the remote high altitude Darjeeling constituen­cy polling station at a primary school in Srikhola near the India-Nepal border.

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