Viet Nam News

Indian election resumes as heatwave hits voters

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India's six-week election juggernaut resumed yesterday with millions of people lining up outside polling stations in parts of the country hit by a scorching heatwave.

Prime Minister Narendra Modi is widely expected to win a third term in the election, which concludes in early June.

But turnout in the first round of voting last week dropped nearly four points to 66 per cent from the last election in 2019, with speculatio­n in Indian media outlets that higher-than-average temperatur­es were to blame.

Modi took to social media shortly before polls re-opened to urge those voting to turn out in "record numbers" despite the heat.

"A high voter turnout strengthen­s our democracy," he wrote on social media platform X. "Your vote is your voice!"

The second round of the poll - conducted in phases to ease the immense logistical burden of staging an election in the world's most populous country - includes districts that have this week seen temperatur­es above 40 degrees Celsius.

India's weather bureau said on Thursday that severe heatwave conditions would continue in several states through the weekend.

That includes parts of the eastern state of Bihar, where five districts are voting yesterday and where temperatur­es more than 5.1 degrees Celsius above the seasonal average were recorded this week.

Karnataka state in the south and parts of Uttar Pradesh, India's most populous state and heartland of the Hindu faith, are also scheduled to vote while facing heatwave conditions.

Earlier this week, India's election commission said it had formed a task force to review the impact of heatwaves and humidity before each round of voting.

The Hindu newspaper suggested the decision could have been taken out of concerns that the intense heat "might have resulted in a dip in voter turnout".

In a Monday statement, the commission said it had "no major concern" about the impact of hot temperatur­es on yesterday vote.

But it added that it had been closely monitoring weather reports and would ensure "the comfort and well-being of voters along with polling personnel".

A wave of exceptiona­lly hot weather has blasted South and Southeast Asia, prompting thousands of schools across the Philippine­s and Bangladesh to suspend in-person classes.afp

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