Chhattisgarh Assembly elections: Second phase of voting begins
Over 13.9 million voters, including 6.83
million women, will be eligible to exercise their franchise in 18,015
polling stations to decide the fate of 843 candidates, 75 women
included.
As many as 3,000 cameras will be installed at the
polling booths to ensure free and fair polls. The main battle is
predictably between the ruling BJP, which has governed Chhattisgarh
since 2003, and the Congress.
Political pundits and reports from
interior areas say that the race for power is wide open. The BJP could
score a hat-trick or the Congress, which headed the first government
after the state was carved out of Madhya Pradesh in 2000, could stage a
comeback.
The Congress has been out of power in the mineral rich
state since December 2003 when the Ajit Jogi-led government suffered a
crushing defeat.
Chief Minister Raman Singh, the BJP's poster boy
in Chhattisgarh, says the people are determined to give one more chance
to his party in a bid to accelerate the pace of economic development.
"In
the past one decade, the BJP government has put development in top
gear. The march for development must continue in the state. I feel in my
campaign across the state that people have already made up their mind
to continue with the BJP regime," the Ayurvedic doctor-turned politician
Singh said.
"There is no anti-incumbency feeling in the state anywhere despite a decade of governance of the BJP," he added.
Jogi,
the face of the Congress in the state despite the party's refusal to
project any leader as the chief ministerial candidate, claims that the
Congress is set to stage a grand comeback in Chhattisgarh.
"Ask
anyone in rural or urban areas, the honest reply is that the Congress is
all set to make a comeback. Actually, people are fed up with the BJP's
gross misrule and scams besides a massive rise in Maoist militancy
during BJP Raj," Jogi said.
Opinion polls carried out by various
agencies in recent weeks however say that the BJP would get a third
five-year term in Chhattisgarh.
Election data shows that the
second phase polling for 72 seats, of which 17 are reserved for
Scheduled Tribes and nine for Scheduled Caste, are spread out in 19
districts.
Saraipali in Mahasamund district has just five
contestants, which is the lowest figure among all 72 constituencies. The
maximum number of candidates, 38, are contesting from Raipur South in
Raipur district where BJP heavyweight and PWD Minister Brijmohan Agrawal
is seeking his sixth consecutive victory.
In the first phase of polling, 18 seats, a majority of these located in Maoists strongholds, saw polling on November 11.
(Agencies)
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