Yahoo – AFP,
Annie Banerji, 10 April 2014
New Delhi (AFP) - Voters went to the polls in New Delhi Thursday on the first major day of India's marathon national election, with the capital a key battleground for an anti-corruption party which shot to fame last year.
![]() |
Indian
voters pose with their voting slips as they stand in a line outside a polling
station at Dabua village on the outskirts of Faridabad on April 10, 2014 (AFP
Photo/
Sajjad Hussain)
|
New Delhi (AFP) - Voters went to the polls in New Delhi Thursday on the first major day of India's marathon national election, with the capital a key battleground for an anti-corruption party which shot to fame last year.
Almost a
fifth of parliament's 543 seats are up for grabs on Thursday, the third of nine
phases of voting in the world's biggest election that will end when results are
published on May 16.
![]() |
In this
photograph taken on April 9, 2014,
Narendra Modi (C) is showered with flower
petals during his roadshow in Vadodara,
some 110 kms from Ahmedabad (AFP
Photo/Sam Panthaky)
|
But Thursday
was of particular importance for the 18-month-old anti-corruption Aam Aadmi
Party (AAP) which triumphed in the Delhi state election last December and is
now contesting more than 400 parliamentary seats nationally.
Seen as a
potential challenge to India's established political parties earlier this year,
there were signs of disillusionment among some early voters after AAP's
troubled time running the Delhi government.
The party
has struggled to shake the "quitter" tag following the dramatic
resignation of party chief Arvind Kejriwal just 49 days after he came to office
as the capital's chief minister.
"We
need stability. So I won't waste my vote on him," Jitender Singh, a
38-year-old rickshaw driver in a purple turban, told AFP in the old part of the
city. "For now it is Modi, Modi, Modi for me. For the country
actually."
Polarising figure
He was referring
to BJP prime ministerial candidate Narendra Modi, the controversial hardline
Hindu nationalist tipped to become prime minister at the head of a coalition
led by his party.
![]() |
Map showing
the constituences voting Thursday in the third stage
of India's nine-stage
general election (AFP Photo/Adrian Leung)
|
His alleged
links to anti-Muslim riots in his home state of Gujarat and his uncompromising
public statements make him a polarising figure, particularly for religious
minorities.
But many
voters have been swayed by his promises of economic development, strong
leadership and clean government after a decade of rule by the scandal-tainted
Congress party and the Gandhi political dynasty.
Kedarnath
Agarwal, a 79-year-old speaking as shopkeepers rolled up their shutters and the
first voters trickled into a nearby polling station, said he would abandon
Congress for the first time in 50 years.
"All
my hopes are pinned on Modi. He is a real leader, strong, decisive and
experienced -- that's what we need this time," he said.
The
63-year-old politician made headlines Thursday after declaring for the first
time that he was married, ending one of the biggest mysteries about his closely
guarded private life.
![]() |
A member of
Indian security personnel
stands guard as voters line up to cast
their ballots
at a polling station in Suchet
Ghar village some 30km from Jammu
on April 10,
2014 (AFP Photo)
|
Riot
victims
In Uttar
Pradesh state, a key battleground that sends 80 MPs to parliament, voters in an
area hit by religious riots last August also went to the polls, including those
still living in refugee camps.
The riots
left more than 50, mostly Muslims, dead and tore apart communities in the
district of Muzaffarnagar, with local politicians facing charges of inciting
the violence.
The unrest
is seen as having polarised the electorate in Uttar Pradesh along religious
lines, with the BJP seen as benefiting from greater support from Hindus while
secular-rooted parties promise to protect religious minorities.
"I
will commit suicide, kill my children but not vote for Modi. He is so
ferocious," Adisa Khatoon, a 35-year-old mother from one of the camps,
told AFP.
The BJP has
fielded two candidates from the area who have been charged with inciting the
attacks which drove 50,000 people from their homes.
![]() |
The leader
of India's Aam
Admi Party (AAP) Arvind
Kejriwal shows his inked
finger at a polling station in
New Delhi on April 10, 2014
(AFP Photo/Raveendran)
|
On
Wednesday three policemen were killed by the Maoists in the insurgency-racked
central state of Chhattisgarh.
Back in
Delhi, early voting took place peacefully and slowly after authorities declared
a public holiday, with voters making their way to polling stations in bright
spring sunshine.
Congress
party chief Sonia Gandhi, dressed in a green sari, and her son Rahul, who is
leading campaigning for a national election for the first time, cast their
votes on Thursday morning.
Turnout in
New Delhi was about 35 percent at 3:00 pm (1130 GMT), three hours before polls
shut. Turnout in 2009 was 52 percent.
The first two
rounds of voting took place Monday and Wednesday in the remote northeast of the
country, where only 12 constituencies went to the polls.





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