West Bengal Gets One Election Observer Per Constituency, Other States Less

The Election Commission of India has announced the deployment of observers for five poll-bound states and a Union Territory. West Bengal is uniquely allocated one general observer for each of its 294 Assembly constituencies, unlike Tamil Nadu, Assam, Kerala, and Puducherry. The observers are mandated to be in place by March 18 and will hold daily meetings to address election-related grievances. West Bengal's elections will be held in two phases on April 23 and April 29, with significant CAPF deployment planned.

Key Points: West Bengal Election: One Observer Per Constituency Deployed

  • West Bengal gets one observer per constituency
  • Maximum police observers in West Bengal
  • Observers to be stationed by March 18
  • Elections in West Bengal in two phases
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West Bengal only one among five poll-bound states and UT to have an observer for each constituency

ECI deploys 557 observers for 5 states. West Bengal is the only state with one general observer for each of its 294 Assembly constituencies.

"The observers... will specify a time fixed every day for meeting the candidates, political parties... to hear their election-related grievances. - Election Commission of India"

Kolkata, March 17

The Election Commission of India, on Tuesday, announced the appointment of 557 general observers, 188 police observers, and 366 expenditure observers for poll-bound West Bengal, Tamil Nadu, Assam, Kerala, and Puducherry, along with by-elections for eight Assembly constituencies in six states.

West Bengal is the only state that will not only have the maximum deployment of general observers, but it is the only state to have one general observer for each of the 294 Assembly constituencies in the state.

In the case of Tamil Nadu, Assam, Kerala, and Puducherry, the number of general observers will be less than the respective number of assembly constituencies.

West Bengal will also have the maximum number of police observers at 84, followed by 40 in Tamil Nadu, 35 in Assam, 17 in Kerala, and four in Puducherry. In the case of expenditure observers, Tamil Nadu will have the maximum deployment at 151, followed by West Bengal at 100.

The Commission has directed that the observers be stationed in their respective Assembly Constituencies by March 18.

"The observers, upon arrival, will make public their contact details and will specify a time fixed every day for meeting the candidates, political parties, or their representatives or any member of the public to hear their election-related grievances," read the notification issued by the ECI on Tuesday.

The Commission appoints Central Observers under the powers conferred on it by Article 324 of the Constitution and Section 20B of the Representation of the People Act, 1951, to assist the Commission in the conduct of free and fair polls. They also oversee the efficient and effective management of the electoral process at the field level, the statement added.

In West Bengal, elections will be conducted in two phases on April 23 and April 29.

In the first phase of polls on April 23, there will be polling for 152 Assembly constituencies, while in the second phase on April 29, there will be polling for 142 Assembly constituencies. As per calculations made by the ECI as of now, not less than 2,300 companies of CAPF will be deployed in each phase.

- IANS

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Reader Comments

S
Sarah B
Interesting data. It clearly shows where the ECI perceives the greatest need for oversight. The disparity in police observers is particularly telling. Hope this leads to a smooth election in all states.
P
Priya S
As a Bengali, I appreciate the extra vigilance. Our state needs it. But I also hope the observers are truly impartial and not influenced by any political narrative. The real test will be on the ground.
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Rohit P
Good step, but why is Tamil Nadu getting the maximum expenditure observers? Is there a specific concern about money power there? The ECI should be equally strict on all fronts in every state.
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Vikram M
Deployment of 2300 CAPF companies in each phase for Bengal is massive. It shows the scale of the challenge. Hope the presence of central forces and observers gives confidence to voters to cast their ballot without fear.
M
Michael C
The constitutional basis (Article 324) mentioned here is crucial. It's good to see the institutional framework being activated. Free and fair elections are the bedrock of any democracy.

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