Qatar Tribune

Modi shows confidence as opposition dismisses adverse exit poll results

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POLITICAL allies swathed Indian Prime Minister Narendra Modi in a victory garland on Tuesday, seeking to project confidence he would win a second straight term in a general election, but the opposition Congress party dismissed prediction­s it would lose.

Exit polls have predicted a clear win for Modi in the election that ended on Sunday, but such polls in India have proved misleading before, and counting of votes cast in the seven-phase contest will take place on Thursday.

The result is expected later that day. The ruling coalition, led by Modi’s Bharatiya Janata Party (BJP), is projected to win between 339 and 365 seats in the 545-member lower house of parliament with a Congress-led opposition alliance getting only 77 to 108, an exit poll from India Today Axis showed.

Modi met leaders from his ruling alliance, receiving garlands and shawls from them in a show of optimism.

Flanked by BJP president Amit Shah, Modi met cabinet ministers, party colleagues and dozens of the leaders from regional blocs that are part of the alliance.

Seated before a sign reading “Welcome and Thanksgivi­ng Meeting” at the BJP headquarte­rs in New Delhi, Modi was also given a meters-long, outsized garland.

But Congress general secretary Priyanka Gandhi Vadra, the younger sister of party president Rahul Gandhi, urged party workers to ignore vote surveys, not lose heart, and to remain vigilant at votecount centres.

“Don’t let rumours and exit polls discourage you. This is being spread to break your determinat­ion,” she said in an audio message late on Monday.

“This has further raised the need for you to remain alert. Please keep vigil outside strongroom­s and counting centres. We are confident that our combined efforts will bear fruit,” she said, referring to centres where electronic voting machines are kept.

The Election Commission said it had received some complaints about attempts to tamper with voting machines in strongroom­s, but they were not true.

“All such reports and allegation­s are absolutely false, and factually incorrect,” it said in a statement.

 ??  ?? Indian PM Narendra Modi.
Indian PM Narendra Modi.

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