Hindustan Times (Lucknow)

BJP drops cow ad, prompts clampdown from EC

- HT Correspond­ent

A newspaper advertisem­ent issued by the BJP, featuring a woman hugging a cow, added fuel to the charged political atmosphere ahead of Thursday’s final phase of voting to be held in minority concentrat­ed districts. The EC, in response to strident criticism from the grand alliance, ordered a blanket ban on all ads unless they were pre-certified by an empowered media panel

The Election Commission (EC) has banned political advertisem­ents in newspapers on Thursday, the day polling for the last phase of Bihar elections will be held, after the watchdog found its earlier warning had not deterred the BJP from issuing a new controvers­ial advertisem­ent.

Invoking its powers under the Constituti­on for the second time within four days over the controvers­ial BJP advertisem­ents, the EC on Wednesday expressed its dismay that “despite its directions certain advertisem­ent with offending nature” got published.

“No political party or candidate or any other organisati­on or person shall publish any advertisem­ent in the newspapers tomorrow unless the contents proposed to be published are got pre-certified by them from the Media Certificat­ion and Monitoring Committee (MCMC),” the EC said, invoking its powers under Article 324 of the Constituti­on.

It also directed the state’s chief electoral officer to ensure that a mechanism is put in place to ensure that no advertisem­ent gets published without pre-certificat­ion of media certificat­ion committee.

The directions came after a row erupted over the fresh advertisem­ent by the BJP that prompted the constituen­ts of the grand alliance — Janata Dal (United), Rashtriya Janata Dal and Congress — to approach the Election Commission, alleging the advertisem­ent amounted to “seeking votes in the name of religion” and that the BJP was “trying to polarise” the elections.

JD(U) leader KC Tyagi had threatened to take the matter to President Pranab Mukherjee’s court if the poll panel failed to take stern action on the issue.

The BJP, however, defended the advertisem­ent, saying there was nothing wrong in it. “We were not the first to raise the issue (of beef). It was Lalu who did. We have just responded,” BJP leader Sushil Modi said in Patna.

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 ??  ?? Bihar CM Nitish Kumar
Bihar CM Nitish Kumar

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