West Bengal CEO Manoj Agarwal Ensures Peaceful Vote Counting on May 4

West Bengal CEO Manoj Kumar Agarwal has assured a peaceful and transparent counting process on May 4. Security has been intensified across the state, including outside strongrooms and counting centers. A multi-layered security system with CAPF and SAP has been deployed. For the first time, a QR code-based Photo Identity Card system has been introduced for authorized personnel.

Key Points: West Bengal CEO Assures Peaceful Counting on May 4

  • West Bengal CEO assures peaceful counting on May 4
  • Multi-layered security deployed across state
  • QR code-based ID system introduced for counting centers
  • Results for 5 states and Puducherry to be declared
2 min read

"There will be no unrest anywhere...counting will take place peacefully": West Bengal CEO Manoj Agarwal

West Bengal CEO Manoj Agarwal says all arrangements are in place for peaceful, transparent counting on May 4. Multi-layered security and QR code system deployed.

"The counting of votes will be conducted in a free and fair manner. We are fully prepared; there will be no unrest anywhere. - Manoj Agarwal"

Kolkata, May 3

West Bengal Chief Electoral Officer Manoj Kumar Agarwal on Sunday said that all arrangements have been made for a peaceful and transparent counting process scheduled for May 4, asserting that the exercise will be conducted in a "free and fair manner" without any possibility of unrest.

"The counting of votes will be conducted in a free and fair manner. We are fully prepared; there will be no unrest anywhere. Tomorrow's counting will take place peacefully," Agarwal told reporters.

Meanwhile, the Election Commission confirmed that preparations for counting across constituencies in West Bengal, including Mekhliganj Assembly Constituency under Coochbehar district, have been completed.

In a post on X, the Election Commission said, "All Set for Counting Day. Counting arrangements are all set at Mekhliganj Higher Secondary School, the designated counting centre for 1-Mekhliganj AC under Coochbehar district."

The results for the Assembly elections in West Bengal, Tamil Nadu, Kerala, Assam and Puducherry will be declared on May 4.

Ahead of counting day, security has been intensified across West Bengal, including outside strongrooms in Kolkata. Heavy deployment of forces has been made outside key locations such as Sakhawat Memorial Government Girls' High School in Bhabanipur and Netaji Indoor Stadium.

Security has also been strengthened outside the Chief Electoral Officer's office, while additional forces have been deployed in sensitive constituencies, including Falta, where protests had earlier been reported over alleged intimidation incidents.

The Election Commission has also put in place a multi-layered security system for counting centres, including a 100-metre security perimeter, State Armed Police at entry points, and Central Armed Police Forces guarding counting halls and strongrooms.

For the first time, a QR code-based Photo Identity Card system through ECINET has been introduced for authorised personnel, including officials, candidates, agents and staff.

Counting will begin at 8:00 am with postal ballots, followed by EVM counting at 8:30 am, with results to be updated in real time on ECINET and the official election portal.

- ANI

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Reader Comments

S
Sneha F
"Free and fair" is a big claim in WB politics. I appreciate the EC’s preparation with CAPF and multi-layered security, but we’ve seen how things can turn ugly. The real test is tomorrow. Counting in Bengal needs zero-room for error. Also, why only now QR codes? Should've been done earlier.
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James A
Great to see the EC implementing QR codes for transparency. As someone who follows Indian elections from abroad, this is a step forward. But the real challenge is ensuring no booth capturing or intimidation after results. Hope the security perimeter holds.
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Priya S
I live in Kolkata and the tension was palpable even yesterday near Bhabanipur. But the EC seems to have learned from past mistakes—strongrooms guarded, CAPF deployed. I just hope all parties accept the results gracefully. Democracy should win, not violence. 🙏
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Vikram M
I am cautiously optimistic. The EC’s prep is detailed—QR codes, 100m perimeter, CAPF at strongrooms—but in Bengal, the mood can change in minutes. I'd like to see real-time updates via ECINET, but more importantly, will there be neutral observers everywhere? Let's see.
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Ashwin V
The Election Commission saying "no unrest anywhere" sounds overly optimistic for West Bengal. I hope it’s true, but history suggests otherwise. At least they’ve put security forces all over—Sakhawat School, Netaji Indoor Stadium. But citizens should stay alert. Counting can be a flashpoint.

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