Lok Sabha polls: Voting for last phase begins in 41 constituencies
Varanasi: Voters headed to the polls on Monday in the final phase of India’s marathon Lok Sabha elections, with hardliner Narendra Modi expected to lead his Bharatiya Janata Party (BJP) to victory after 10 years of Congress party rule.
Modi was vying to win a seat in the Hindu holy city of Varanasi five
weeks after the start of the world’s biggest election, which has been
marred by religious divisions and personal attacks.
Modi urged voters to turn out in record numbers on Monday
to throw the scandal-plagued Congress party from power after 10 years
in charge.
“People are tired of false promises, corruption and the
same old tape-recorded messages,” Modi said in a blog after campaigning
officially ended on Saturday night.
The first voters filed into polling stations at 7am in
Varanasi, with early queues indicating enthusiasm for one of the
election’s most high-profile contests.
Modi is pitted against anti-corruption hero Arvind Kejriwal, the feisty leader of the upstart Aam Aadmi Party.
More than 66 million voters are eligible to cast their
ballots in three electorally critical states in the final phase of the
election, which began on 7 April.
Counting takes place on Friday and results are expected on the same day.
Opinion polls show voters have turned against Congress,
which has dominated Indian politics since independence, over massive
graft scandals, spiralling inflation and a sharp economic slowdown
during its two terms in charge of a coalition government.
The BJP is forecast to win the most seats in the
543-member parliament, but it will likely fall short of an outright
majority, meaning it will need to forge its own coalition with smaller
and regional parties.
India’s opinion polls have proved wrong in the past and
can be unreliable given the size and remoteness of sections of the
country, which has 814 million eligible voters, the biggest electorate
in history.
“I am confident that the voters will give a mandate to an
inclusive, fair and unifying (Congress) government,” he said in an
interview to a Hindi-language newspaper.
“The Congress understands the needs of the people, particularly those who are poor and disadvantaged.”
A personal battle
The voting will mark the end of an acrimonious election
battle that has seen Modi trade blows with Rahul Gandhi, his sister
Priyanka, and his mother Sonia, who is president of Congress.
There are 41 seats up for grabs in Uttar Pradesh, India’s
most populous state which sends 80 lawmakers to parliament, and the
neighbouring states of Bihar and West Bengal.
Modi, 63, the son of a tea-stall owner who rose through
the BJP ranks, has derided Rahul, 43, scion of the Gandhi dynasty which
has produced three prime ministers, as a reluctant “shehzada” (prince).
Beleaguered Gandhi and other Congress leaders have hit
back, accusing the avowed Hindu nationalist Modi of being dangerously
divisive and prejudiced against the country’s 150-million strong Muslim
minority.
The BJP “only wants to divide people, make people fight each other”, Gandhi told a mass rally in Varanasi on Saturday.
Modi, chief minister of Gujarat, has campaigned on a
pledge of development, investment and jobs to revive the flagging
economy, largely steering clear of any Hindu nationalist agenda.
But he remains a deeply polarising figure over
allegations that he failed to swiftly curb deadly 2002 anti-Muslim
riots. The unrest that swept Gujarat during his early years as chief
minister left at least 1,000 people, mainly Muslims, dead.ecurity will be on high alert for Monday’s vote following a series of
deadly attacks, including one by Maoist rebels on Sunday in which seven
police were killed in a landmine blast in the central state of
Maharashtra. AFP
pratima kumari
pgdm 2nd sem
The BJP leader was never been found guilty of wrongdoing.
The first exit polls—surveys of voters as they leave polling stations—are expected later Monday, once voting ends at 6pm.
Rahul Gandhi,
who has headed a lacklustre Congress campaign, denied in comments
published on Sunday that his party was staring at almost certain defeat.
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