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No fresh case of violence reported during re-polling

A day after the violence-marred Panchayat polls, the West Bengal State Election Commission on Monday conducted re-polling at 696 polling booths. However, no fresh cases of violence were reported as it was under the supervision of Central Armed Police Forces (CAPF). A senior CAPF officer informed that the re-polling was underway at 696 polling booths […]

A day after the violence-marred Panchayat polls, the West Bengal State Election Commission on Monday conducted re-polling at 696 polling booths. However, no fresh cases of violence were reported as it was under the supervision of Central Armed Police Forces (CAPF).
A senior CAPF officer informed that the re-polling was underway at 696 polling booths in 18 districts peacefully.
“There were more than 14,000 sensitive polling booths but the state administration just mentioned about 4000 such booths that led to violence at many places on Sunday. The deployment of CAPF was also not done appropriately,” he said.
“The situation was completely different during re-polling as CAPF was deployed at all 696 polling booths and there was no information of violence from anywhere till 1 pm,” he added.
Senior officers were monitoring the situation from control rooms through CCTVs and taking regular updates from each polling booth, informed another CAPF officer.
“We have deployed six-seven CAPF personnel at polling booths where violence had occurred and re-polling has been ordered,” the officer said.
It was informed that the State Election Commission had set up a total of 61,636 polling booths to conduct elections for 3,317 Gram Panchayats, 341 Panchayat Samitis and 20 Zila Parishads in the state of West Bengal on Saturday.
To ensure the safe conduct of the polls, 59,000 personnel of the Central Armed Police Forces (CAPF) and other state police forces were given the responsibility for the security of polling booths across the state which also includes 4,834 sensitive booths on which only CAPFs are deployed, it further informed.
With re-polling of the Panchayat elections underway in West Bengal, voters in Murshidabad on Monday expressed their happiness over the deployment of central forces.
“Today, it feels like an election day. We can see the central forces today”, said Anamika Mandal, who came to cast her vote at Tikiapara Primary High School in the Murshidabad district.
In addition, another voter, Anjana Majumdar, expressed her happiness over the deployment of the central forces.
She said, “The first day, there were no central forces. There were just three Police personnel. Today, we are happy to see the central forces here, we will be able to cast votes properly and go home.”
Speaking about the security arrangements in South 24 Parganas, SDPO Canning Dibakar Das said, “There are proper arrangements. Punjab Police gave us 10 Constables and an officer, and so did West Bengal Police. I too have a reserve of 52 constables and two officers with me…We have enough deployment today and voters are already lining up. Polling has already started.
Repolling was underway in 697 booths across five districts of West Bengal on Monday following the violence during the panchayat polls in the state on July 8.
The re-polling was conducted in 697 booths across five districts: Purulia, Birbhum, Jalpaiguri, Nadia and South 24 Parganas, said West Bengal State Election Commission (SEC).
The SEC, in an official release, said, “The West Bengal State Election Commision in the exercise of the powers conferred on it by sub-section-3 and sub-section-4 of Section-67 of the said Act, hereby fixes 10th day of July 2023, as the date of taking the fresh polls at 7:00 hours to be continued upto 17:00 hours uninterruptedly till completion and direct the District Panchayat Election Officer to fix the polling station at which polls will be taken”.
Earlier on Sunday, alleging ballot rigging in the West Bengal panchayat polls which is marred by violence, Bharatiya Janata Party (BJP) MP Khagen Murmu called for re-polling in Bengal, claiming that presiding officers and election staff were engaged in proxy voting in favour of the Trinamool Congress (TMC).

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