Two presiding officers were removed following allegation of influencing voters and an election agent of Communist Party of India-Marxist detained for interrogation after postal ballots were recovered from him, the sources said in Kolkata.
"The presiding officer of booth number 2 of Bharatpur assembly constituency in Murshidabad and a presiding officer of booth number 101 in Ranaghat (south) constituency in Nadia district were removed and replaced by new presiding officers," Additional Chief Electoral Officer N K Sahana said.
Coverage: Assembly Elections 2011
A CPI-M election agent in Palashipara assembly constituency in Nadia district was detained by the police after 25 postal ballot papers were recovered from him, an election commission official said. Birbhum district recorded the highest turnout at 38 per cent, closely followed by Nadia with 37 per cent and Murshidabad with 35 percent.
An electorate of 93.33 lakh will decide the fate of 293 candidates.
Prominent candidates whose fate will be decided are Abhijit Mukherjee, son of Union Finance Minister Pranab Mukherjee contesting from Nalhati, former high court judge Nure Alam Chowdhury, a Trinamool Congress candidate contesting from Murarai, Rukbanur Rahman, brother of late computer graphics teacher Rizwanur Rahman from the Chapra constituency, besides Panchayat minister and CPI-M leader Anisur Rahaman.
The Bharatiya Janata Party has fielded candidates in all seats, followed by CPI-M in 31, Trinamool Congress in 29, the Bahujan Samaj Party in 27 and Congress in 21 seats.
Security arrangements were in place for peaceful polling in 22 constituencies in Murshidabad, 17 in Nadia and 11 in Birbhum having a total of 11,531 polling stations. Besides the police, 4800 central security personnel have been deployed.
The six-phase election will end on May 10.