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In a repeat of the record turnout in the first phase, the second phase of Gujarat Assembly elections on Monday saw 70 per cent polling in the toughest electoral test for Chief Minister Narendra Modi who is seeking a third term.
Counting of votes will be taken up on Thursday with the massive turnout being a subject of intense speculation on which party would benefit.
An Election Commission official here said an estimated 70 per cent cast their ballots in the second and final phase.
A record 70.75 per cent of the eligible voters cast their ballots in the first of the two-phase elections last Thursday with the average polling being a little over 70 percent. The highest polling recorded in the previous Assembly elections was 63.70 per cent in 1967.
The poll was marred by a firing incident involving BJP MLA from Sahera in Panchmahal district Jetha Bharwad in which four people were injured. Bharwad has been detained and investigation is on.
"An estimated 68 to 69 per cent voters exercised their franchise in the second phase of polling," a source in the state election office told PTI.
Like the first phase on December 13 when a record 70.75 per cent voters exercised their franchise, the final phase of balloting in 95 of state's 182 seats too saw a huge voter turnout to decide the electoral fate of 822 candidates including Modi and Shankar Singh Vaghela, a former chief minister and one of the contenders for the top job if Congress returns to power.
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Controversial former minister of state for home, Amit Shah, accused in Sohrabuddin Sheikh and Tulsiram Prajapati encounter cases, Health Minister Jaynarayan Vyas and Revenue Minister Anandiben Patel are also among those in the fray.
While Modi, seeking a third straight win from Maninagar, is crossing sword with Shweta Bhatt, wife of suspended Indian Police Service officer Sanjeev Bhatt, Jagruti Pandya, wife of slain BJP leader Haren Pandya of Gujarat Parivartan Party, is trying her luck from Ellis Bridge seat.
A Modi-baiter, Sanjeev Bhatt has accused Modi of complicity in post-Godhra communal riots, and is fighting legal battle against him.
Haren Pandya's family has blamed Modi for his "political murder". Pandya had twice won the Ellis Bridge seat in 1995 and 1998, before being denied BJP nomination, allegedly at the behest of Modi, in 2002.
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"This election will be historic in India as it has been contested on the issues of good governance and development," he said.
According to Panchmahal Superintendent of Police Sachin Badshah, Bharwad was attacked by a stone-pelting crowd following which his bodyguard open fired wounding four people.Bharwad received head injury and has been detained while undergoing treatment at a local hospital.
His Congress rival Takhatsingh Solanki, who belongs to Tarsang, alleged, "It was pre-planned by Jetha Bharwad so that he can terrorise the voters of my village and engage in bogus voting. Otherwise he has no business to enter in my village at the time of voting."
Serpentine queues were seen since morning outside polling stations with women and youth turning out in large numbers.The massive voting in urban pockets and districts of north and central Gujarat, is expected to shore up the electoral prospects of BJP as Keshubhai's Leuva community voters are fewer in number in these areas.
Kadva Patels along with Leuvas have been traditional voters of the BJP, but in seats of Saurashtra and Kutch belt a section of the latter was said to have voted against the saffron party candidates.
The BJP hopes to nullify whatever damage octogenarian Keshubhai's party might have caused it in Saurashtra-Kutch belt aided by heavy polling in the urban sprawls, which have seen rapid development under Modi, and seats of north and central Gujarat.
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