Siliguri:Over 76 per cent of the electorate cast their votes in the three northern West Bengal constituencies in the second phase of the Lok Sabha elections on Thursday. Polling remained largely peaceful barring sporadic incidents of violence and vandalism, including an attack on a CPI-M candidate and the smashing of an Electronic Voting Machine (EVM).
Three Lok Sabha constituencies in North Bengal were,Jalpaiguri (SC), Darjeeling and Raiganj.
Voter turned out till 5 PM
Constituencies | Polling(5 PM) |
Jalpaiguri (SC) | 82.76 % |
Darjeeling | 72.14% |
Raiganj | 73.31% |
Voting across 5,390 polling stations began at 7 a.m. and officially ended at 6 p.m. amid tight security by both the central forces and the state police force. However, in a number of booths, queues could be seen well after the deadline.
Much of the violence was reported from Chopra in Darjeeling constituency, where voters put up a road blockade demanding that CRPF personnel be deployed in all polling stations to ensure their security.
The villagers, including many women, complained of intimidation by goons backed by the ruling Trinamool Congress and refused to cast their votes under the supervision of state police personnel, accusing them of being partisan.
The matter escalated in the afternoon, as BJP and Trinamool Congress activists clashed with each other and hurled stones and crude bombs, forcing the Rapid Action Force (RAF) personnel to resort to baton charge and lob tear gas shells to disperse the crowd.
Later, the central force personnel took confidence-building measures in the area and escorted the agitating voters to their respective polling stations.
The Bharatiya Janata Party (BJP) had won the Darjeeling seat in 2009 and 2014 but faces an uphill task this time as the Trinamool Congress has joined hands with a faction of the principal hill party Gorkha Janamukti Morcha.
The workers of the BJP and Trinamool Congress also clashed inside a polling booth at Chopra's Kotgach, where an EVM was broken into pieces.
"All possible measures have been taken in Chopra and the situation is now under control. Central forces have also been deployed in concerned polling booths. Currently, the polling process is on," an official said.
The villagers standing in the queue said the situation became "normal" after the deployment of the central forces.
Meanwhile, the vehicle of the sitting Communist Party of India-Marxist (CPI-M) MP from Raiganj, Mohammad Salim, was damaged at Islampur when he visited the area on receiving reports of booth capturing. Salim alleged that the police were "mute spectators" during the attack.