Sunday, February 8, 2026
ADVT 
India

116 million vote in sixth round of Lok Sabha battle

Sreeparna Chakrabarty, IANS, 17 Apr, 2014 10:12 AM
    An estimated 116 million people voted peacefully Thursday in the critical sixth round of parliamentary election to pick 121 MPs from 12 states, officials said.
     
    Barring stray incidents of violence and intimidation, the gigantic exercise involving 1,767 contestants across the length and breadth of the country passed off smoothly, the Election Commission said.
     
    "Polling was generally peaceful and incident free," Deputy Election Commissioner Vinod Zutshi said after 11 hours of hectic polling ended at 6 p.m. Only in Manipur, balloting finished two hours earlier.
     
    Polling percentages varied from a high of around 80 in West Bengal to 54 in Madhya Pradesh.
     
    "After today's phase, a large section of India has already voted," said BJP's prime ministerial candidate Narendra Modi. "People have voted in the heat and have voted for a strong government."
     
    He added that the long queues of first-time and women voters "are positive steps".
     
    Maoist guerrillas struck in Jharkhand, exploding a land mine at Bokaro in Giridih constituency and injuring four paramilitary troopers. They also blew up a school building and a rail track.
     
    Allegations of voter intimidation came from parts of Bihar and West Bengal. The Election Commission ordered repolling in nine polling stations in Bihar.
     
    Throughout the day, most of the 225,387 polling centres saw long queues of men and women of all age groups eager to vote. In most states, there was more voting compared to 2009.
     
    Thursday's election covered a vast part of the Indian landscape -- from Jammu and Kashmir in the north to Karnataka in the south, from Maharashtra along the west coast to West Bengal in the east.
     
    Polling took place in all 28 Lok Sabha seats in Karnataka, 20 of the 25 in Rajasthan, 19 of the 48 in Maharashtra, 11 seats each in Odisha and Uttar Pradesh, 10 in Madhya Pradesh, seven in Bihar, six in Jharkhand, four in West Bengal, three in Chhattisgarh and one seat each in Manipur and Jammu and Kashmir. 
     
    Simultaneous balloting was held for 77 of the 147 assembly seats in Odisha and two assembly bypolls in West Bengal. 
     
    With Thursday's round, polling has been completed in 232 of the 543 seats in the Lok Sabha. 
     
    Thursday saw the largest number of Lok Sabha seats in contention on any one day since the staggered balloting started April 7. Four more rounds of voting are due until May 12. The result will be declared May 16.
     
    Thursday was important both for the BJP and the Congress, which held 40 and 36 of the Lok Sabha seats that went to the polls, as well as the Janata Dal-United, Jharkhand Mukti Morcha, Janata Dal-Secular, Shiv Sena, Maharashtra Navnirman Sena, Aam Aadmi Party, Biju Janata Dal, Samajwadi Party, Bahujan Samaj Party and Trinamool Congress.
     
    The BJP claimed it was confident of winning most seats contested Thursday.
     
    "We are sure of winning all 25 seats (in Rajasthan)," Chief Minister Vasundhara Raje said in Jaipur. 
     
    Former central minister Ananth Kumar voiced confidence about the BJP's ability to do well in Karnataka, where it is the main opposition party to the ruling Congress.
     
    Central ministers Sushilkumar Shinde and Jyotiraditya Scindia brushed aside the BJP's claims. 
     
    "There is no Modi wave," Scindia said after voting in Guna in Madhya Pradesh. Shinde said in Sholapur: "There is no Modi wave here, only Shinde wave."
     
    Prominent candidates in the fray included Ananth Kumar and Nandan Nilekani (Bangalore South), Jaswant Singh (Barmer), Sachin Pilot (Ajmer), Ashok Chavan (Nanded), Misha Bharti (Pataliputra), Supriya Sule (Baramati), B.S. Yeddyurappa (Shimoga), Ghulam Nabi Azad (Udhampur), Maneka Gandhi (Pilibhit), Shatrughan Sinha (Patna Sahib), M. Veerappa Moily (Chikkaballapur), Sushilkumar Shinde (Solapur), V. Balakrishnan (Banglaore Central), and S.S. Ahluwalia and Bhaichung Bhutia (Darjeeling).
     
    About 1.37 million staff oversaw the polling, watched over by hundreds of thousands of police and paramilitary personnel. 

    MORE India ARTICLES

    Time to give back to country what I got in life: Nandan Nilekani

    Time to give back to country what I got in life: Nandan Nilekani
    Indian IT bellwether Infosys' co-founder Nandan Nilekani, who has declared assets worth Rs.7,770 crore ($1.3 billion), said that "it's time to give back to people and the country" what he got in life as he contests the Lok Sabha election.

    Time to give back to country what I got in life: Nandan Nilekani

    Terror attack in Jammu and Kashmir

    Terror attack in Jammu and Kashmir
    According to the latest news one person has been repotted to be killed in a terror attack in Jammu and Kashmir.

    Terror attack in Jammu and Kashmir

    India among 11 nations formally declared polio-free

    India among 11 nations formally declared polio-free
    India and 10 other Asian countries were formally declared polio-free by the World Health Organization (WHO) Thursday.

    India among 11 nations formally declared polio-free

    Rahul promises to create 100 mn jobs

    Rahul promises to create 100 mn jobs
    Congress vice president Rahul Gandhi Thursday promised to create "100 million jobs" for the unemployed youth of the northeastern states if his party again comes to power at the centre.

    Rahul promises to create 100 mn jobs

    NEWSFLASH: Miraculous escape for Haryana governor

    NEWSFLASH: Miraculous escape for Haryana governor
    Haryana Governor Jagannath Pahadia had a miraculous escape Thursday when his plane caught fire at the airport here, official sources said.

    NEWSFLASH: Miraculous escape for Haryana governor

    Election Special: We will fight them and beat them, claims Amarinder Singh

    Election Special:  We will fight them and beat them, claims Amarinder Singh
    Amarinder Singh has set the political temperature soaring after the Congress announced he would take on BJP heavyweight Arun Jaitley in Amritsar and the confident former Punjab chief minister who belongs to an erstwhile royal family says "we will fight them and beat them".

    Election Special: We will fight them and beat them, claims Amarinder Singh