[Barring a stone pelting incident at Soibagh area in Budgam district,
the situation was peaceful in the areas of polling.]

http://www.deccanchronicle.com/nation/current-affairs/130417/peaceful-srinagar-repoll-records-jks-lowest-ever-turnout-of-2-per-cent.html

'Peaceful' Srinagar repoll records J&K's lowest ever turnout of 2 per cent

Published Apr 13, 2017, 6:13 pm ISTUpdated Apr 13, 2017, 10:49 pm IST

Barring a stone pelting incident at Soibagh area in Budgam district,
the situation was peaceful in the areas of polling.

 Kashmiri women hide their faces from cameras to conceal their
identity as they arrive to cast their votes during a re-polling of a
by-election for a vacant seat in Dooniwari. (Photo: AP)

Srinagar: The re-poll held on Thursday at 38 polling stations located
in Jammu and Kashmir’s central district of Budgam, the worst-hit by
violence during by-poll to prestigious Srinagar Lok Sabha seat on
Sunday, was by and large peaceful.  But the voter turnout is
embarrassing lowest 2.02 percent.

“The re-poll concluded in a peaceful atmosphere. Out of 35,169 voters,
a total of 709 voters exercised their right of franchise which amounts
to a poll percentage of 2.02,” said J&K’s Chief Electoral Officer Mr.
Shantmanu.

The by-poll to Srinagar Lok Sabha seat held on Sunday was marred by
widespread violence leaving eight people dead and dozens wounded which
augmented anger among the people in Kashmir Valley. Also a meager 7.14
percent of over 1.2 million voters turned up to use their democratic
right which was the lowest in five decades. This raised questions
about the sanctity of this election.

The Election Commission (EC) ordered re-poll at 38 polling stations in
five Assembly segments of Budgam even though the by-poll to Anantnag
Lok Sabha seat scheduled for April 12 was deferred by it till May 25
in view of widespread violence witnessed in Srinagar.

Thousands of security personnel were deployed across Budgam’s five
segments ahead of the re-poll. Each area where the re-poll was being
held gave the look of a fortress whereas strict security restrictions
were imposed elsewhere in the district after invoking Section 144
CrPc. The Internet services available at fixed broadband lines were
again suspended for more than six hours on Thursday whereas mobile
internet services remain suspended since April 8 night. Director
General of Police, Shesh Paul Vaid, said that the Internet services in
the Valley will be fully restored by Thursday night.

A vast majority of voters stayed away from the polling as no votes
were polled at 27 out of 38 polling stations, the official sources
said. The 2.02 percent turnout is the lowest in the election history
of Jammu and Kashmir, they added.

Witnesses and official sources said that while not a single vote was
polled at 27 polling stations, three out of 7,122 votes were cast in
Budgam, 261 out of 14,837 in Chadoora, 58 out of 8,126 in
Charar-e-Sharief and 357 out of 4, 233 in Beerwah segments.

The Kashmiri separatists have termed the lowest turnout as their
victory and said that the same should service as “eye-opener” to New
Delhi and its “stooges” in the State. The alliance of key separatist
leaders Syed Ali Shah Geelani, Mirwaiz Umar Farooq and Muhammad Yasin
Malik which had asked the people to boycott the elections on the
premise that any such exercise held within the ambit of Indian
Constitutions cannot be a substitute to promised plebiscite said in a
statement here, “Delhi and its henchmen must stop these flop shows and
foolish moves as these are proving a nuisance and a reason for
continuous bloodshed.”

The Mirwaiz also wrote on micro-blogging site Twitter.com “The utter
contempt people of #Kashmir have shown towards farce called
‘election’, an eye-opener for those who can’t read writing on the
wall”. Former Chief Minister and opposition National Conference
working president, Omar Abdullah, while reacting to 2.02 percent voter
turnout tweeted “If you thought things couldn’t get worse than the 7 %
we saw on the 9th of April.”

Though the CEO said the entire exercise was “a peaceful affair” and
thanked people and officials for making it so, street clashes were
reported from a few areas of Budgam during or soon after the re-poll
was over. The security forces fired teargas canisters and shotgun
pellets to disperse stone-throwing crowds while the former were
withdrawing from poll duty in NasurUllah Pora village of Budgam.  The
locals alleged that the security forces ransacked some residential
houses and damaged stationary cars and other vehicles in the area, the
charge denied by the authorities.  Clashes were reported also from
Beerwah, Soibug, Magh-e-Mehtab and a couple of other areas but these
were ‘marginal’ when compared to Sunday’s violence and mayhem
witnessed across the constituency, the police sources said.

The by-poll result will be declared on April 15. The by-poll to the
two Lok Sabha seats in Kashmir Valley- Srinagar and Anantnag-were
necessitated by the resignation of sitting members of ruling People’s
Democratic Party (PDP) including its president Mehbooba Mufti. While
Ms. Mufti who was elected from home constituency Anantnag in the 2014
elections quit her Lok Sabha seat to fulfil the Constitutional
obligation following her appointment as Chief Minister, her party
colleague Tariq Hameed Karra resigned from both the PDP and Parliament
in protest against its forging an alliance with
ideologically-divergent BJP to form coalition government in the State.
The voting in Anantnag is scheduled to be held on Wednesday.


-- 
Peace Is Doable

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