Kolkata: The eighth phase of the assembly poll in West Bengal on Thursday (April 29) brought to an end the protracted voting schedule in the state. The last phase of the Assembly poll witnessed sporadic violence, assault of candidates, and death of a person during the day.
Voter turnout of 76.07 per cent was recorded till 5 pm in 35 constituencies where polling was conducted on Thursday and is expected to go up further after the polling ends at 6.30 PM, said a PTI report citing the Election Commission sources.
Voting was held in 11,860 polling stations of the 35 constituencies — 11 each in Murshidabad and Birbhum, six in Malda, and seven in north Kolkata, the sources said. One person was killed and two others were injured when a car hit them in Murshidabad district hours before the polling exercise began, a police officer told PTI.
The CPI(M) claimed that its member Kader Mondal(42) was killed, and two others — Asim Al Mamoon (43) and Lal Chand Mondal (42) were injured when TMC candidate Jafikul Islam ran his car over them. Islam, TMC’s Domkal candidate, rubbished the allegation claiming that he was nowhere near the site of the incident.
Chief Election Officer (CEO) Aariz Aftab has sought a report from district authorities in the matter.
In the Beliaghata area of the city, clashes broke out between two groups which were followed by lathicharge by the police to disperse the people. Two persons who identified themselves as BJP activists alleged that TMC workers roughed them up during the melee.
There were clashes between TMC and BJP activists in Ilambazar area of Bolpur constituency. BJP candidate Anirban Ganguly’s car was damaged when he reached there. Ganguly, who was touring the constituency to check the polling process at different booths, alleged that the attack on his vehicle was by TMC-backed goons.
TMC candidate for the constituency and state minister Chandranath Sinha rubbished Ganguly’s allegations and said that villagers drove him away as the BJP candidate was trying to influence voters.
In the Nanoor constituency of violence-prone Birbhum district, BJP candidate Tarakeshwar Saha reportedly suffered injuries after his vehicle was ransacked. The BJP candidate reportedly accused TMC cadres of attacking him and the allegation was dubbed as “baseless” by local leaders of the state’s ruling party.
In the Domkol area in Murshidabad, district clashes broke out between the TMC and the BJP activists. The police later recovered a huge quantity of crude bombs from a field. Bomb disposal squads rushed to diffuse the bombs.
In the Maniktala constituency of Kolkata, BJP candidate Kalyan Choubey was gheraoed by a group of people during his visit to the polling booths. Choubey alleged that TMC-backed anti-socials tried to create disturbances so that they could rig the polls.
Maniktala TMC candidate Sadhan Pande alleged that agents of his party were assaulted by BJP cadres in several booths. “A lady agent was beaten up by BJP goons. The EC should take note of it,” Pande said.
Crude bombs were burst outside Mahajati Sadan on the arterial Central Avenue in central Kolkata on Thursday morning, a Kolkata Police senior official told reporters. An official of the CEO’s office said that banned crackers were burst at the spot.
BJP’s Jorasanko candidate Meena Devi Purohit alleged that the bombs were thrown at her vehicle when she was touring different polling booths. A huge police contingent was rushed to the spot to control the situation.
Senior TMC leader Sougata Roy alleged that BJP goons along with a section of the central forces had terrorised voters. The BJP and officials of the central forces have dubbed the allegations as baseless.
Since early morning, long queues were seen outside most polling booths raising concerns over the spread of COVID-19. The Election Commission, however, assured that all precautionary measures are in place.
The poll panel deployed 641 companies of central forces in the final phase to ensure fair voting. The eight-phase election to the 294 member West Bengal assembly began on March 27, while votes will be counted on Sunday.
The state today registered its highest single-day deaths of 89 people due to COVID-19, pushing the toll to 11,248, according to the health department bulletin. The coronavirus tally topped the 8-lakh-mark to settle at 8,10,955 after 17,403 tested positives in the last 24 hours, it said.
The state now has 1,10,241 active cases, it said, adding that 12,885 patients recovered since Wednesday. At least 53,724 samples were tested during this period.
(With Agency Inputs)