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Nagaland and Meghalaya elections updates: 75% turnout in Nagaland and 67% in Meghalaya till 5 pm

FP Staff February 27, 2018, 19:33:48 IST

The stage is set for Tuesday’s crucial Assembly elections in the two north-eastern states of Meghalaya and Nagaland.

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Nagaland and Meghalaya elections updates: 75% turnout in Nagaland and 67% in Meghalaya till 5 pm
February 27, 2018, 19:33:48 (IST)

Meghalaya: Repolling ordered in one polling station

Repolling has been ordered at one polling station (Kyndon Tuber) in Raliang constituency in Meghalaya’s Jowai district due to “mix up of EVMs”. Ballot unit meant for Mookaiaw was instead sent to Raliang. Dates have not been announced yet.

Input by Kyrmenlang Uriah/101Reporters

February 27, 2018, 18:55:37 (IST)

Watch: Meghalaya’s chief election officer FR Kharkongor briefs on polling in state

At the customary end-of-polls press conference, Meghalaya’s chief election officer FR Kharkongor explains that the hilly terrain in the state has hindered communications, especially with regions like Garo Hills and West and Southwest Khasi Hills which fall in the shadow areas, leading to incomplete polling percentage figures.

“This is what is available to me at this stage. Later on Tuesday or Wednesday, we will have the full and comprehensive voting percentage.”

Input by Kyrmenlang Uriah/101Reporters

February 27, 2018, 18:51:40 (IST)

Peaceful polling in Meghlaya, 88 VVPATs malfunctioned

February 27, 2018, 18:50:35 (IST)

Visuals from Kohima: Voting machines reach deputy commissioner’s office

February 27, 2018, 18:30:46 (IST)

75% polling in Nagaland till end of voting hours, voters in queues

Seventy-five percent of the 11 lakh voters in Nagaland on Tuesday came out to cast their vote in the assembly elections, the Election Commission said.

When voting ended at 4 pm, voters were seen standing in queues outside polling stations, indicating that the poll percentage will go up. According to rules, those in queues are allowed to cast their votes.

In the last Assembly elections, the voting percentage was recorded at a remarkable 90 percent, Deputy Election Commissioner Sudip Jain told reporters.

A total of 11,76,432 voters  5,97,281 men, 5,79,151 women and 5,884 service voters  are eligible to exercise their franchise in the Nagaland polls. 

PTI

February 27, 2018, 18:16:42 (IST)

Polling still on in some constituencies of Nagaland

Visual from Tanlao ward in Mon town. 

Armstrong Chanambam/101Reporters

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February 27, 2018, 17:59:36 (IST)

67% turnout in Meghalaya, 75% in Nagaland: EC

Chief Election Officer FR Kharkongor said, the 50 percent poll percent in Meghalaya, reported earlier, was based on the information the poll panel got from limited number of polling booths.

The 67 percent turnout in Meghalaya is an updated figure that the Eleciton Commission received at 5 pm. Kharkongor further added that the Election Commission is yet to receive polling percentage update from Garo Hills region, which accounts for 40 percent of the overall booths in Meghalaya. 

Polling in still continuing in about 22-25% of the total polling stations across Meghalaya, he said.

February 27, 2018, 17:45:11 (IST)
75% polling percentage in Nagaland till 5 pm
February 27, 2018, 17:09:12 (IST)

Meghalaya chief minister Mukul Sangma positive of win

Chief Minister Mukul Sangma voiced confidence that the Congress will retain power, crossing the magic figure of 31 MLAs. 

“I have full faith in the people. I believe they have full confidence in the Congress. We will cross the magic number,” Sangma told journalists after voting at Chengkompara polling station in Ampati segment.

Sangma, the chief architect of the Congress win on 29 seats in the 2013 elections, is contesting from Ampati and Songsak.

Asked whether the Congress had decided on potential partners in case it fell short of a majority in the new house, he quipped: “We do have lots of good friends.”

IANS

February 27, 2018, 17:04:38 (IST)

50% vote in Meghalaya as balloting ends, people still queued up

Over 50 percent of the 18.9 lakh voters exercised their franchise in the elections to 60-member Meghalaya Assembly at the end of voting hours, even as hundreds were still lined up to cast ballots.

“Over 50 percent electorate had cast their votes till 4 pm, with a large number of voters still in queues at various polling stations across the state,” Chief Electoral Officer Frederick Roy Kharkongor said.

A total of 18,09,818 electorates, including 9,13,702 women and 89,405 first-time voters, were to decide the fate of 361 candidates, including 31 women and many independents. Counting of votes will take place on 3 March. A total of 31.40 percent of the voters had cast votes till 1 pm.

He said technical glitches in 31 Electronic Voting Machines (EVMs) and 41 VVPATs (Voter Verifiable Paper Audit Trails) were reported from around 180 polling stations.

IANS

February 27, 2018, 16:33:30 (IST)
At 4 pm, 50% of the registered electorate had cast their votes in Meghalaya, says chief election officer
February 27, 2018, 16:18:24 (IST)

Meghalaya chief minister, NPP chief cast their votes

Meghalaya chief minister Mukul Sangma, who is contesting the Assembly election from Ampati and Songsak constituencies, cast his vote at a polling station in South West Garo Hills district on Tuesday, election officials said. The chief minister cast his vote at the remote Chenkompara polling station in Ampati constituency in the afternoon.

Sangma is seeking re-election for the fifth time from his home constituency in Ampati. “Citizens of Meghalaya do exercise your voting rights in a responsible and judicious manner. Counting on you all for peaceful elections throughout the state,” the chief minister had tweeted earlier during the day.

The National People’s Party chief Conrad K Sangma cast his vote in Selsella constituency in the West Garo Hills district, a district election official said.

“We have done our best. We have showed the vision for the state. I am confident people will vote for change. It is now for the voters and I hope people turn out in large number,” Conrad Sangma said soon after casting his vote.

PTI

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February 27, 2018, 16:08:56 (IST)

North Shillong’s Oakland polling station goes all pink

Interestingly, all seven of the candidates in the constituency are men.

Input from Kyrmenlang Uriah/101Reporters

February 27, 2018, 15:53:45 (IST)
Nagaland: 67% polling percentage till 3 pm, says Election Commission
February 27, 2018, 15:52:29 (IST)

Meghalaya governor Ganga Prasad after voting at the Oakland polling station in 17 North Shillong constituency

Input from Kyrmenlang Uriah/101Reporters

February 27, 2018, 15:51:20 (IST)
Voter turnout of 46.83% reported until 3:30pm in Meghalaya
February 27, 2018, 15:42:06 (IST)

Meghalaya: BJP registers complaint with Election Commission over objectionable advertisement on radio channel

February 27, 2018, 15:36:54 (IST)

Ex-Meghalaya CM and Nongpoh MLA Donwa Dethwelson Lapang casts his vote at Pahamlapong polling station

Image courtesy: Kyrmenlang Uriah/101Reporters

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February 27, 2018, 15:25:05 (IST)
Fresh clashes reported in Nagaland

According to NDTV, one person was killed and two were injured after clashes broke out near a polling booth in Nagaland’s Akuluto between Naga People’s Front (NPF) and Nationalist Democratic Progressive Party (NDPP).

Meanwhile, Times Now reported that the clashes were between workes of NPF and BJP. It further reported that one worker was shot at chest and his condition is critical.

February 27, 2018, 15:15:13 (IST)

Indo-Tibetan Border Police troops guard polling booths in Meghalaya

February 27, 2018, 15:13:40 (IST)

Around 35% polling till 2 pm in Nagaland

February 27, 2018, 15:12:40 (IST)

Visuals from polling stations in Meghalaya’s Tura town

February 27, 2018, 14:58:00 (IST)

Peace is still precarious in the state

Three years after brokering the Framework Agreement for peace with Nagaland’s largest rebel group in August 2015, earlier this month, the BJP broke its 15-year alliance with the state’s ruling party, as we said. Traditionally, votes were cast on the basis of village or clan affiliations. However, with the Hindutva-centric BJP now entering the fray, the campaign has turned communal. 

Despite the indefinite ceasefire, Nagaland continues to live under the controversial Armed Forces Special Power Act, in its 60th year in the state now (1958 to 2018). Declared a “disturbed area”, the deadline for repealing the Act in the state has been extended for another six months, to June 2018. At least 126 civilians in Nagaland were killed in insurgency attacks from 2007 to February 2018, showed the South Asia Terror Portal database. In the first two months of 2018 alone, the state reported four deaths, indicating peace in Nagaland is still precarious.

Read full analysis here

February 27, 2018, 14:52:52 (IST)

RECAP: Narendra Modi had campaigned in Nagaland on 22 February

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February 27, 2018, 14:46:58 (IST)

Mukul Sangma casts his vote in Meghalaya

February 27, 2018, 14:43:42 (IST)

Nagaland AAP candidate alleges malpractice in his constituency 

Akavi Zhimomi, AAP candidate for Nagaland’s Ghaspani-I seat, alleges voters fraud in his constituency, reports The Hindu.  He has been quoted as saying that he alerted the Election Commission over “one man one vote” not being practised in many polling stations.

February 27, 2018, 14:40:42 (IST)

Arrangements for the polls in Meghalaya

The CEO said a total of 106 companies of the Central Armed Police Forces (CAPF), along with the state armed personnel and police, were deployed across the state, especially in the troubled Garo Hills region.

Tuesday’s polling will decide the fate of 361 candidates, including 31 women and 80 Independents, election office sources said, adding that 18.09 lakh voters were eligible to exercise their franchise in 3,025 polling stations in the state. For the first time, 67 all-women polling stations and 61 model polling stations were set up in the state, the CEO said.

State Director General of Police (DGP) S B Singh said 580 polling stations were categorised as “vulnerable” and that strict security measures were in place across Meghalaya to ensure a free-and-fair election.

February 27, 2018, 14:21:06 (IST)

Over half of the candidates in Nagaland are crorepatis

Out of the 193 candidates analysed in Nagaland, 114 (59 percent) were found to be crorepatis. The average of assets per candidate contesting in the Assembly elections is Rs 3.76 crores. However, there is one candidate, namely Akavi N. Zhimomi (AAP) contesting from Ghaspani-I constituency, who has declared zero assets in his affidavit.

Source: ADR

February 27, 2018, 14:19:18 (IST)

Voter turnout update at 2 pm

As of 2 pm, voter turnout in Nagaland stands at 57 percent. Voting in Nagaland is expected to continue till 4 pm. However, in some remote areas of the state, the polling may be wrapped up by 3 pm.

February 27, 2018, 14:09:31 (IST)

Malfunctioning in EVMs, VVPATs delay polling in Meghalaya

According to CEO Fredrick R Kharkongor, polling at many booths were delayed due to malfunctioning EVMs and VVPATs. He didn’t give any numbers related to the scale of malfunctions saying they were still collecting information from the ground. He said polling hours will be extended accordingly.

Input by Prabhu Mallikarjunan/101Reporters

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February 27, 2018, 14:03:40 (IST)

Want more employment opportunity in Nagaland, says voter

A 26-year old voter says she expects more employment opportunities to be created by the next government in Nagaland.

Armstrong Chanambam/101Reporters

February 27, 2018, 13:49:35 (IST)

NPF president Shurhozelie Liezietsu says Nagaland peaceful despite imposition of AFSPA

NPF president Shurhozelie Liezietsu says it puzzles him that the Indian government has put AFSPA in force in Nagaland despite the peace in the state. “The Naga issue is different from the problems around. Based on our unique history, we are fighting for our right. We believe we will be able to bring about a satisfactory conclusion to the problem. Nagaland is peaceful despite all the problems in the state. Naga people have been longing for peace for too long. Therefore, imposition of any draconian law is not at all necessary. That’s what’s puzzling us. Why Indian government has put that draconian law in force in Nagaland.”

Armstrong Chanambam/101Reporters

February 27, 2018, 13:42:54 (IST)

Average assets of Meghalaya candidates grew by 44 percent

In Meghalaya, 57 MLAs are recontesting in the ongoing assembly elections. The average assets of these MLAs in 2018 is Rs 11.19 crores. Their average growth in assets from 2013 to 2018 is Rs. 3.41 crores i.e. an increase by 44 percent.

Source: ADR

February 27, 2018, 13:36:10 (IST)

Voting to end at 3 pm in some booths in Nagaland

In some remote areas in Nagaland, voting will end by 3 pm. However those voters who are present near the polling booths will be provided coupons so that they can continue voting even after the close of polls.

Input by Armstrong Chanambam/101Reporters

February 27, 2018, 13:34:35 (IST)

NPF lodges complaint with EC, alleges BJP-NDPP of violating poll code

The NPF has lodged a complaint with the EC alleging that the NDPP-BJP alliance in Nagaland has violated the Election Model Code of Conduct,The Morung Express reported on Tuesday.

The NDPP-BJP alliance “has, through full, front page advertisements in the local daily newspapers today (26 February, 2018), blatantly violated the Model Code of Conduct by way of making a slew of promises”, NPF associate press secretary Atou Liezietsu wrote to the CEO, Nagaland.

According to the NPF, these promises include “100 percent funding of Centrally-sponsored schemes for Northeast region (which was earlier in the ratio of 90:10), Rs 5300 crore for infrastructure in the next three years, Rs 10,000 crore for roads in Nagaland, Rs 3000 crore for Dimapur-Kohima railway line, Rs 800 crore for power connectivity, and Rs 1800 crore for Kohima Smart City”.

101Reporters

February 27, 2018, 13:21:36 (IST)

Polling percentage at 1 pm

As of 1 pm, the polling percentage in Nagaland is 56 percent, while it stands at 28.5 percent in Meghalaya. 

Source: Chief Election Officers, Nagaland and Meghalaya

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February 27, 2018, 13:17:10 (IST)

ITBP troops guarding various polling booths in Nagaland

February 27, 2018, 13:13:38 (IST)

People are queuing up in front of polling booth at Baghmara in Meghalaya

Image courtesy: Twitter @AIRnewsalerts

February 27, 2018, 13:06:27 (IST)

Meghalaya BJP president casts his vote

February 27, 2018, 13:04:02 (IST)

A brief about Meghalaya 

Surrounded by Bangladesh on its south and west, and Assam to its east and north, Meghalaya, roughly the size of Israel, holds a population of two million, equivalent to that of Lucknow. The Khasi, Jaintia and Garo, most of whom are Christian, form the three major ethnic tribes in the state and comprise 86.15 percent of its population, shows the 2017 Meghalaya statistical handbook. The religious minorities here include Hindus (11.5 percent) and Muslims (4.4. percent).

Once considered a “role model” of peace and democracy, Meghalaya has witnessed rising insurgency and terrorism since the late 1980s and especially since 2009, according to this 2016 policy brief by the Delhi-based Institute for Defense Studies & Analyses. It has also faced unrest due to demands from each of the three major tribes for separate statehood, border disputes with Assam, illegal mining and import of weapons from Assam and Bangladesh, which have impeded the state’s progress.

Read full report here

Latest updates: As over 67 percent of the 18.9 lakh voters on Tuesday exercised their franchise in the elections to 60-member Meghalaya Assembly at the end of voting hours, Nagaland witness 75 percent voter turnout as hundreds were still lined up to cast their ballots. The Election Commission said that the final figures of voting in the two states will be out later in the day.

Meanwhile, the BJP in Meghalaya filed a complaint with the Election Commission over the alleged broadcast of communal message on radio channel, Radio Mirchi, All India Radio reported.

Violence broke out in Nagaland’s Akuluto Assembly constituency after two groups from NPF and NDPP clashed, killing one and injuring two others. According to the state CEO, there has been no disturbance to polling process which goes on well, adding that an Additional SP is on the scene. Earlier, Meghalaya CEO Fredrick R Kharkongor has said faulty EVMs and VVPAT errors were reported at some places due to connectivity issue. Several reports of malfunctioning EVMs and VVPATs are constantly emerging from Meghalaya. In Nagaland, reports suggest that voting has been halted in Ladigarh polling station due to tension along Assam-Nagaland Border. Meanwhile, the first polling percentages have been released for both the states. A bomb explosion has been reported at a polling booth in Tizit Assembly constituency in Nagaland. The bomb explosion occurred at 6.45 am and one man has suffered injuries in his left leg, says Nagaland Police. State’s chief minister TR Zeliang has sought peaceful resolution of the five-decade long insurgency after successful elections. Even as polling is underway in Meghalaya and Nagaland, Prime Minister Narendra Modi took to Twitter to urge voters to ‘come out in large numbers’ to vote.

The stage is set for Tuesday’s crucial Assembly elections in the two northeastern states of Meghalaya and Nagaland. Polling will be held between 7 am and 4 pm, except in some polling stations of the interior districts of Nagaland, where the process is scheduled to conclude at 3 pm. The two states have a 60-member House each, but voting will be held for 59 constituencies in both.

In Meghalaya, the election has been countermanded in Williamnagar in the wake of the killing of NCP candidate Jonathone N Sangma in an IED blast in East Garo Hills district on 18 February. In Nagaland, NDPP chief Neiphiu Rio has been declared elected unopposed from the Northern Angami-II constituency.

The results of the polls in the two states, along with that of Tripura, will be declared on 3 March.

A high-decibel campaign for the polls in the two states came to an end on Sunday evening.

Buoyed by the formation of governments in Assam, Manipur and Arunachal Pradesh, the BJP is making a determined bid to expand its footprint in the North East. For the Congress, the poll outcome in Meghalaya is particularly significant as it has been ruling the state for the last 10 years. But this time, the BJP is leaving no stone unturned to throw the Congress out of power and add Meghalaya into its kitty.

Political observers are keenly watching the BJP’s push in the North East, a Congress stronghold, where the saffron party has traditionally been a marginal player.

In Meghalaya, the Congress and the BJP are pitted against each other. While the former has fielded 59 candidates, the latter has put up nominees in 47 constituencies. Though they are contesting the polls separately, in Meghalaya, the National People’s Party (NPP) of Conrad Sangma, son of former Lok Sabha speaker P A Sangma, is the BJP’s partner in the North East Democratic Alliance (NEDA).

Representational image. AP

In Nagaland, BJP’s hope hinges on its alliance partner NDPP (the Nationalist Democratic Progressive Party) of Neiphiu Rio, which is contesting from 40 seats. The saffron party has fielded candidates from the remaining 20 seats. The Congress, which has given three chief ministers to Nagaland since the state’s inception in 1963, is contesting from only 18 seats, two less than the BJP, an emerging entity in the North East.

There are 370 candidates in the fray in Meghalaya. A total of 18.4 lakh voters are eligible to exercise their franchise in 3,083 polling stations in the state. Meghalaya’s Chief Electoral Officer (CEO) FR Kharkongor said for the first time, 67 all-women polling stations and 61 model polling stations were set up in the state. He added that 32 women candidates were in the fray, the highest ever in the state.

In Nagaland, a total of 11,91,513 voters – 6,01,707 (50.50 percent) men and 5,89,806 (49.50 percent) women – will exercise their franchise on Tuesday. There are also 5,925 service voters.

Voting will be conducted in 2,156 polling stations as 40 polling stations fall under the Northern Angami-II seat, from where Rio has been declared elected unopposed.

Over 15,000 government employees will be on poll duty and there will be 177 all-women polling stations across 25 constituencies in the state. The election process in Nagaland had started on a difficult note.

Following a no-election diktat from the Core Committee of Nagaland Tribal Hohos and Civil Organisations (CCNTHCO), advocating “solution (to the Naga political issue) before election”, the political parties had initially kept away from the poll process.

Though the process of nomination-filing had started on 31 January, the first batch of 22 contestants filed their candidature only on the penultimate day on 5 February. There was a heavy rush of nominees filing their papers on the last day. After the scrutiny and withdrawal, a total of 227 nominees are left in the field in Nagaland. As many as 281 companies of the Central Armed Police Forces (CAPF), beside the state police force, are deployed throughout Nagaland to ensure a peaceful election.

Nagaland’s CEO Abhijit Sinha said all the polling stations would be manned by the CAPF personnel, while the state police would also be assisting them. Of the 2,156 polling stations in Nagaland, 1,100 were declared critical, 530 vulnerable and 526 normal, he added.

The Meghalaya CEO told PTI that six of the 10 additional companies of CAPF were deployed in the troubled East and South Garo Hills districts.

With inputs from PTI

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