The Hindu (Vijayawada)

Barmer, Banswara see high polling in Rajasthan

Election ends in the desert State with second and ‚nal phase, which recorded an average turnout of 64.07%; supporters of rival candidates clash in Barmer, villagers boycott polls in three districts

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ver 64% of voters cast their ballot in the second and †nal phase of the Lok Sabha election in 13 of the 25 constituen­cies in Rajasthan on Friday. As many as 152 candidates are in the fray in the second phase in the State. The highest voter turnout of 73.68% was recorded in Barmer, followed by 72.24% in Banswara, while the average turnout in the State was 64.07%.

The desert State polled 58.28% votes in the †rst phase of election on April 19, while the overall turnout was 63.71% in 2019. The polling on Friday was brisk in most of the constituen­cies, where long queues of voters were seen outside the booths since early morning. The seats which went to the polls were situated in the western, south-eastern and southern parts of the State.

The candidates in the second phase polling included Lok Sabha Speaker Om Birla, Union Ministers Gajendra Singh Shekhawat and Kailash Choudhary, BJP State president C.P. Joshi and former Assembly Speaker C.P. Joshi. Former

OChief Ministers Ashok Gehlot and Vasundhara Raje campaigned for their sons in Jalore and Jhalawar-Baran, respective­ly.

Chief Minister Bhajan Lal Sharma said the high polling percentage recorded in the second phase in the State would go in favour of the BJP. “The people in Rajasthan have cast their ballot to express their disapprova­l of appeasemen­t and corruption,” Mr. Sharma told pressperso­ns here.

Booth capturing charge

The supporters of Independen­t candidate Ravindra Singh Bhati and Congress candidate Ummeda Ram Beniwal clashed at

Sheo in Barmer district over allegation­s of booth capturing. Mr. Bhati, who represents Sheo in the Assembly, alleged that tapes had been pasted to hide his name printed on electronic voting machines. The polling was halted for half-an-hour after the clash.

Voters did not turn up to exercise their franchise at Aadibhit village in Banswara because of a dispute over the plans to establish a nuclear power plant. Villagers at Dhurasani in Pali district and Balwanta in Ajmer boycotted the polling citing water crisis and poor condition of roads.

An 80-year-old man, identi†ed as Chhagan Lal, who was standing in the queue of voters in Pur town of Bhilwara district, collapsed after feeling dizzy and died before he could cast his ballot. A 108year-old woman, Bhuri Bai, came on a wheelchair to the polling station in Loda Hera of Kota district.

Voting was held in Ajmer, Banswara, Bhilwara, Barmer, Chittorgar­h, Jalore, Jodhpur, Jhalawar-Baran, Kota, Pali, Rajsamand, Tonk-Sawai Madhopur and Udaipur Lok Sabha constituen­cies. Chief Electoral O¥cer Praveen Gupta said about 2.8 crore people were eligible to vote in the second phase, for which a total of 28,758 polling booths were set up.

 ?? REUTERS ?? Worth the wait: Women stand in a queue at a polling station in Barmer on Friday.
REUTERS Worth the wait: Women stand in a queue at a polling station in Barmer on Friday.

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