["6.5%" is now (finally?) revised upward to "7.14%", apparently,
without any explanation offered.

Reproduced below is an updated report on the poll, held yesterday,
letting us a glimpse into the current state of turbulence.

(One may, here, like to recall that just a week back Indian Prime
Minister Narendra Modi on his visit to J&K had offered Kashmiri youth
a choice: between “tourism and terrorism”:
<https://scroll.in/article/833600/tourism-or-terrorism-its-clear-that-narendra-modi-fails-to-see-kashmir-beyond-catchphrases>.)]

http://indianexpress.com/article/india/at-least-8-killed-in-srinagar-poll-violence-voter-turnout-6-5-per-cent-4606603/

Srinagar poll violence: At least 8 killed, voter turnout 7.14%

Srinagar bypoll: Official figures put the voter turnout at a record
low of 7.14%, revised from 6.5 per cent announced earlier.

Written by Bashaarat Masood , Mir Ehsan , UBEER NAQUSHBANDI     | Srinagar
| Updated: April 10, 2017 8:04 am

People outside polling booth in Srinagar. (Express Photo by Shuaib Masoodi)

Eight persons were killed in firing and scores, including securitymen,
were injured in violent clashes Sunday during the bypoll to the
prestigious Srinagar Lok Sabha seat which saw a voter turnout of only
7.14 per cent, a new low for the sea
Official estimates put the injured count at 300 — 200 civilians and
100 security personnel.

***The main theatre of stone-pelting and violent protests was Budgam,
a district that traditionally records high voter turnout in the Valley
— in the last Assembly election, the turnout in the district was 59.11
per cent.*** [Emphasis added.]

Six protesters were killed in firing at four different places. Two
more deaths were reported in the evening — a Ganderbal man succumbed
to injuries at the SKIMS Hospital and an 18-year-old died at Barsoo.

A polling booth in Ganderbal was set ablaze after protesters hurled
petrol bombs.
The Srinagar Lok Sabha seat is spread over three districts — Srinagar,
Budgam and Ganderbal — and the main contestants for the seat are
Farooq Abdullah, joint candidate of the National Conference and
Congress, and Nazir Ahmad Khan, nominee of the ruling PDP. The seat
fell vacant after Tariq Hameed Karra of the PDP resigned to protest
the crackdown on street protesters last year.

Internet services were down at most places as polling began this
morning. By noon, 118 polling stations had already closed.

Official figures put the voter turnout at a record low of 7.14 per
cent, revised from 6.5 per cent announced earlier.

***In the evening, J&K Chief Electoral Officer Shantmanu told
reporters: “As of now, a little above 80,000 votes were polled which
makes it a poll percentage of 6.5… (It) is much less than 26 per cent
which was the polling percentage in the last election in 2014… not a
good day for all of us.”*** [Emphasis added.]

“There were incidents of stone pelting. Petrol bombs were hurled and a
polling booth was set ablaze. EVMs were also damaged in the process
but many of these EVMs were received back. There were firing incidents
and we lost six lives,” he said.

Shantmanu said the Election Commission would take a final call on
“what is to be done in those cases where elections were not
concluded”.

Unlike the previous years, the festive mood at polling booths was
missing. There were no long queues outside booths where youths
gathered to raise slogans.

At Aripanthan, the home village of PDP candidate Nazir Ahmad Khan,
youths collected outside a government building that housed two polling
booths and threw stones at paramilitary personnel deployed there. The
protest stopped only after the polling staff and securitymen told the
protesters that the gates of the polling station would be closed.
“How can they (political parties) expect us to vote,” said Fayaz
Ahmad, one of the protesters. “Only six months ago, four youth died in
our village,” he said, referring to the crackdown on street protesters
last year.

Nazir Ahmad Khan, who had secured more than 20,000 votes in the
Assembly elections on a Congress ticket, joined the PDP recently and
was counting on his home turf to win.
At several places in Beerwah, people attacked polling stations,
forcing the election staff to end polling in the afternoon. ***In the
Assembly elections, the turnout in Beerwah was 74.59 per cent***
[emphasis added].

In the village of Rathsuna, men and women entered a polling station
and tried to snatch an EVM. A 30-year-old was killed and a woman
critically injured when security personnel opened fire.

The other deaths took place in Daulatpora in Chadoora, Dalwan village
in Chrar-e-Sharief and at Check Kawoosa in Narbal village.

Srinagar and Ganderbal districts were relatively peaceful but not many
people turned out to vote. At the Government Boys Higher Secondary
School in Bemina, only five of 1,541 votes were cast in the first
three hours. Voter turnout was also low in the twin towns of Ganderbal
and Kangan.

The only departure from the trend was at Lar village in Ganderbal. By
2.30 pm, 492 of 1,215 votes were polled at Lar A while 352 of 1,232
votes had been cast at Lar B. Riyaz Ahmad Sheikh (38) said: “We have
two political families living in two parts of the village” — he was
referring to NC leader Ishfaq Jabbar and PDP leader Qazi Afzal. “If
their (Jabbar’s) relatives and neighbours come out to vote, we will
definitely walk to the polling booths to cast our votes. It is village
rivalry,” he said.

In Wusan, a resident said: “The boycott is our message to politicians
without ethics. In the last elections, the PDP took votes to keep the
BJP away and they are now sharing power. NC had made similar mistakes
in the past. They are taking common people for a ride.”

(PTI adds: Expressing distress over the death of civilians in firing
by security forces, Chief Minister Mehbooba Mufti said: “I am
distressed to know that many of those killed were young or teenagers
who were yet to understand the intricacies of the issues.”

“This is the time that people of all shades of opinion in the state
should come together and help in stopping this cycle of violence and
bloodshed which unfortunately has plagued Jammu and Kashmir for three
decades now,” she said.)

Former Chief Minister Omar Abdullah took to Twitter: “Have contested 6
elections over 20 years & have never seen this level of violence in
elections in Kashmir. Six dead, many injured. What a terrible day.
Condolences to the families of the deceased & prayers for the
injured.”

The separatists called the “boycott” a success and mourned the deaths.
Mirwaiz Umar Farooq said: “The only way for us to express our
collective grief at their death and share the sorrow with the bereaved
families is to observe a shutdown… The leadership has decided to
observe a two-day shutdown on Monday and Tuesday.”


On 09/04/2017, Sukla Sen <[email protected]> wrote:
> ["An abysmally low 6.5 per cent polling was recorded in the bypoll for
> the Srinagar Lok Sabha seat from where Jammu and Kashmir's former
> chief minister Farooq Abdullah is contesting."
>
> The death of shame and outrage.]
>
> http://timesofindia.indiatimes.com/india/only-6-5-per-cent-voter-turnout-in-srinagar-lok-sabha-bypoll/articleshow/58095263.cms
>
> Only 6.5 per cent voter turnout in Srinagar Lok Sabha bypoll
>
> PTI | Updated: Apr 9, 2017, 07.04 PM IST
>
> SRINAGAR: ***An abysmally low 6.5 per cent polling was recorded in the
> bypoll for the Srinagar Lok Sabha seat from where Jammu and Kashmir's
> former chief minister Farooq Abdullah is contesting.*** [Emphasis
> added.]
>
> Amid large scale violence, which claimed the lives of six civilians,
> the prestigious seat recorded a turnout at 6.5 per cent, the state's
> Chief Electoral Officer Shantmanu told journalists.
>
> He said more than 100 security personnel were also injured in the violence.
> When asked as to how many polling stations he expected repoll to be
> ordered, the officer said it could be anywhere between 50 and 100
> booths or maybe more.
>
> Top Comment
>
> Those who turned out must have been Hindu voters. The others may not
> have wanted to risk it out under the hostile situation. ----- Kashmir
> is a bimaru state. Contributes nothing. Hogs quite a lot. An... Read
> More
> Ethical Athiest
>
> Shantmanu rpt Shantmanu said Anantnag Lok Sabha seat in south Kashmir,
> where bypoll is scheduled for April 12, would pose a [still] "bigger
> challenge". Chief Minister Mehbooba Mufti's younger brother Tasaduq
> Mufti is making his electoral debut from Anantnag
>
> --
> Peace Is Doable
>


-- 
Peace Is Doable

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