Bengal Phase 2 Polls: 61.11% Voter Turnout in First Six Hours

West Bengal Assembly elections Phase 2 recorded 61.11% voter turnout in the first six hours, slightly lower than Phase 1's 62.18%. East Burdwan district led with 66.80% polling, followed by Hooghly and Nadia. Minor violence and disruption were reported, but no casualties or major injuries occurred. Allegations of voter intimidation by Trinamool Congress activists in Falta led to CRPF deployment and an EVM tampering probe.

Key Points: West Bengal Phase 2 Polls: 61.11% Voter Turnout

  • 61.11% voter turnout in first 6 hours of Phase 2
  • East Burdwan records highest at 66.80%
  • No major casualties despite violence reports
  • CRPF deployed after allegations of voter intimidation in Falta
2 min read

Bengal polls: Brisk voting underway, 61.11 pc recorded in first six hours

West Bengal Assembly elections Phase 2 sees 61.11% voter turnout in first six hours, with East Burdwan leading at 66.80%. Central forces deployed amid minor violence reports.

"They were threatened by the ruling party activists either to vote in favour of the ruling party or not to vote at all - Villagers in Dakshin Basulnath"

Kolkata, April 29

The polling percentage in the first six hours till 1 p.m. on Wednesday in the second phase of West Bengal Assembly elections for 142 constituencies has been recorded at 61.11.

This is slightly lower than the 62.18 per cent recorded in the first six hours of April 23 voting in the first phase in 152 Assembly constituencies.

In district-wise voting, till 1 p.m., East Burdwan district recorded the highest polling percentage at 66.80, followed by Hooghly district at 64.57, Nadia at 61.41, Howrah at 60.68, the electoral district of Kolkata (Uttar) at 60.18, North 24 Parganas at 59.20, South 24 Parganas at 58.58, and the electoral district of Kolkata (Dakshin) at 57.73.

Incidentally, this polling percentage is substantially higher than the average percentage of 45.10 recorded in the same period in the seven-phase 2024 Lok Sabha polls.

Although there have been reports of poll-related violence and disruption from certain pockets since morning, no reports of casualties or major injuries, or large-scale voter intimidation have been reported. This is being largely attributed to the alert monitoring by the central forces under the strict surveillance of 142 general observers and 95 police observers, up from 84 in the first phase of polls this time.

In the last two hours, allegations were made against Trinamool Congress for threatening villagers in Dakshin Basulnath village under Falta Assembly constituency in South 24 Parganas district. The villagers allege that they were threatened by the ruling party activists either to vote in favour of the ruling party or not to vote at all.

A huge contingent of the Central Reserve Police Force (CRPF), under the command of an Inspector General-rank officer, reached the spot and escorted the voters to the polling booth.

Falta already came into the limelight on Wednesday, after it was noticed that in a booth, the EVM button beside the name of the Bharatiya Janata Party (BJP) candidate was covered with white tape. The Election Commission of India (ECI) has already ordered a probe into the matter.

- IANS

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Reader Comments

P
Priya S
The CRPF presence seems to be helping keep things under control, but the intimidation in Dakshin Basulnath village is worrying. Every voter should feel safe to cast their vote. Proud of the people turning out despite threats.
V
Vikram M
These high polling numbers show that Bengal's democracy is alive and kicking! But the EVM tape issue is totally unacceptable. The EC must investigate and ensure free and fair elections. Let's hope peace prevails.
J
James A
Impressive voter turnout in Bengal today! As an outsider, it's encouraging to see such enthusiasm for democracy. Hope the authorities address the intimidation reports promptly. Every vote counts.
S
Siddharth J
East Burdwan leading with 66.80%! Good to see active participation from our region. But why are these allegations of threats always coming from Trinamool strongholds? The central forces need to be even more vigilant.

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