Bengal Votes in Phase 1: 152 Seats, High Security, and EVM Glitches

Polling began at 7 a.m. for the first phase of the West Bengal assembly elections, covering 152 constituencies across 16 districts. The process commenced under an unprecedented security blanket involving thousands of central armed police personnel. While the polling was largely peaceful, technical glitches with EVMs were reported at several booths, delaying the mandatory mock polling. The second phase of voting for the remaining seats is scheduled for April 29, with results to be declared on May 4.

Key Points: West Bengal Phase 1 Polls: Voting Begins for 152 Seats

  • Voting for 152 assembly seats across 16 districts
  • High security with 2407 central force companies deployed
  • Reports of EVM malfunctions in some booths
  • Two-stage voter verification process in place
3 min read

Bengal polls: Voting begins for 152 assembly constituencies in 16 districts (Ld)

First phase of Bengal elections sees high voter turnout under massive security. EVM glitches reported in some booths. Results on May 4.

"I call upon all citizens to participate with full enthusiasm in this festival of democracy. - Narendra Modi"

Kolkata, April 23

Polling has begun for 152 assembly constituencies scattered over 16 districts from 7 a.m. on Thursday in the first phase of the two-phase crucial West Bengal assembly polls.

The voters' enthusiasm over the elections seemed to be quite high this time, with the queues of voters being witnessed in front of some polling stations in several assembly constituencies, much before the beginning of the polling process at 7 a.m. officially.

This time, the voters are required to go through a two-stage verification process, the first being by the central armed police (CAPF) personnel before entering the polling station premises, and the second by the booth-level officer (BLO) concerned before entering the polling room.

The polling process had been peaceful so far at the time the report was filed. However, there had been reports of some malfunctioning of electronic voting machines (EVMs) at certain polling booths at the time of the beginning of the polling process.

Mock polling, mandatory before the actual polling process, could not start in time at a polling station at the industrial township of Durgapur in West Burdwan district because of the inactive battery of the EVM there.

Similarly, mock polling could not be conducted at a polling booth at Siliguri in Darjeeling district in North Bengal and Baharampur in the minority-dominated Murshidabad district.

The 16 districts where polling is being held in the first phase on Thursday are Cooch Behar, Darjeeling, Kalimpong, Jalpaiguri, Alipurduar, North Dinajpur, South Dinajpur, and Malda in North Bengal, and Murshidabad, East Midnapore, West Midnapore, Jhargram, Purulia, Bankura, West Burdwan, and Birbhum in South Bengal.

Seven of these 16 districts are under the Election Commission of India's special scanner due to security concerns on the polling day.

The first phase of the Assembly polls is being conducted under unprecedented security cover, with the deployment of 2,407 companies of central forces, including Central Armed Police Forces, the India Reserve Battalion, and personnel from armed police wings of other states, in addition to personnel from West Bengal Police and Kolkata Police.

Webcasting is being conducted in all polling stations.

Prime Minister Narendra Modi posted a social media message in Bengal addressing the people of West Bengal. "The first phase of voting for the West Bengal Assembly elections is today. I call upon all citizens to participate with full enthusiasm in this festival of democracy. I especially urge my young friends and the women of West Bengal to vote in large numbers," the message from the Prime Minister read.

The Chief Election Officer (CEO), West Bengal, Manoj Kumar Agarwal, the Election Commission of India (ECI)-appointed special observer, Subrata Gupta, and the ECI-appointed police observer, N.K. Mishra stayed back at the CEO's office in central observer overnight on Wednesday, conducting last-minute supervisions to ensure free & fair and violence-free polls in the first phase on Thursday.

The second phase of polls in West Bengal for the remaining 142 assembly constituencies will be on April 29. ​The results will be declared on May 4.

- IANS

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Reader Comments

A
Arjun K
The heavy security deployment by the ECI was absolutely necessary given Bengal's history. Peaceful polling so far is a good sign. Let's hope it stays this way for the second phase as well. Jai Hind!
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Rohit P
While the security is good, the two-stage verification might cause unnecessary delays in this heat. The EC should streamline the process. Also, EVM battery issues before mock poll? That's basic preparedness. Needs to be better.
S
Sarah B
Webcasting in all polling stations is a fantastic transparency measure. It builds trust in the process. Kudos to the election officials working overnight to ensure smooth elections.
M
Meera T
As a Bengali, I feel this election is crucial for our state's future. The high turnout, especially of women and youth, gives me hope. Let the best party win for Bengal's development! ❤️
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Vikram M
Good to see the PM's message encouraging participation. Democracy is our strength. Now it's up to the people of Bengal to choose wisely. May 4th will be interesting!

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