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Punjab goes to polls peacefully

An estimated 65 to 70 per cent voters cast ballots in the Punjab assembly polls and the Ropar (reserved) Lok Sabha byelection on Friday, February 7, reports reaching the state election headquarters in Chandigarh said.

The polling to constitute the 11th state assembly passed off peacefully barring a skirmish in the Ferozepur district in which three people were injured.

A repoll has been ordered for Saturday at one booth at Fateh Nagal village in the Dhariwal assembly constituency in Gurdspur district where the presiding officer was issued only 681 ballots as against listed strength of 1,066 votes. The polling started on time but came to a halt in the afternoon when the ballot papers were exhausted, according to reports received from Gurdaspur.

An electorate of over 15.2 millions held the scales for 693 contenders to 117 assembly seats. In the Ropar (reserved) parliamentary byelection former federal minister Buta Singh (Congress) was locked in a four-cornered contest where over 1.22 million voters were eligible.

Polling began at 7.30 am on a dull note due to chilly weather. However, it picked up as the day advanced and became brisk by noon when people queued up in front of polling booths in large numbers to exercise their franchise.

The polling was more brisk in rural areas than in urban areas. Women outnumbered men voters at several places.

It was for the first time after 1980 that all major political parties joined the electoral fray in the state after the end of militancy. In the February 1992 the Akalis had boycotted elections and only 23.8 per cent of the voters had exercised their franchise.

The Congress had put up 105 candidates and had an informal understanding with the Communist Party of India which had fielded 15 aspirants. The Akali Dal Badal-BJP alliance contested 114 seats (Akali Dal-B 92 and BJP 22).

The Akali Dal (Mann) and the Bahujan Samaj Party alliance had put up 98 candidates (Akali Dal Mann 31 and BSP 67). The Janata Dal had fielded 28 candidates, Communist Party of India-Marxist 26, Shiv Sena 5, Samajwadi Janata Party 3, Samajwadi Party 2 and Janata Party 1 and other unrecognised regional parties 50. As many as 246 independents are also in the fray.

Notable personalities in the fray include chief minister Rajinder Kaur Bhattal, finance minister Kewal Krishan, state Vidhan Sabha speaker Dilbag Singh Daleke (all Congress), Akali Dal-B stalwarts Parkash Singh Badal, Sukhdev Singh Dhindsa, Captian Kanwaljit Singh and former Vidhan Sabha speakers Surjit Singh Minhas and Ravi Inder Singh, BJP president Balramji Dass Tandon and former chief Madan Mohan Mittal, Akali Dal-M chief Simranjit Singh Mann, Janata Dal leaders Roop Lal Saathi and son Vijay Kumar Saathi, CPI leader Hardev Singh Arshi and BSP leader Satnam Singh Kainth.

The authorities had made elaborate security arrangements for the polling in 18,097 polling booths of which 1,057 had been identified as hypersensitive and 2,744 sensitive.

Over 100,000 Punjab police personnel and 150 companies of paramilitary forces had been deployed to ensure smooth, fair and free polling. International borders with Pakistan and interstate borders with Rajasthan and Haryana had been sealed to check infiltrators and undesirable elements.

Counting of votes will be taken up on Sunday at 7.30 am IST and the results are expected to start trickling in by evening.

Most of the results are expected to be declared by midnight that day.

UNI

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