AP polls marred by clashes between TDP and YSRCP workers, EVM glitches

Voting has begun for 25 Lok Sabha seats, 175 assembly seats in Andhra Pradesh

Chandrababu family voting Twitter Andhra Pradesh Chief Minister N. Chandrababu Naidu and his family pose for photographers after voting | Twitter handle of N. Chandrababu Naidu

Clashes broke out on Thursday between workers of the ruling Telugu Desam Party and YSR Congress at various places in Andhra Pradesh even as technical glitches in electronic voting machines hampered the poll process at numerous polling booths as voting got under way for 25 Lok Sabha and 175 Assembly seats.

In Guntakal, former MLA and contesting candidate of Jana Sena Party, Madhusudan Gupta, smashed an EVM in a fit of rage alleging that party symbols were not properly printed on the ballot unit. He also shouted at the polling personnel on duty. Gupta was immediately taken into police custody.

A mandal parishad member of YSRCP was seriously injured when TDP workers allegedly attacked him at a polling station in Eluru city. In Jammalamadugu in Kadapa district, tension prevailed in Ponnathota village as YSRCP and TDP workers indulged in stone-throwing.

In Narsaraopet constituency in Guntur district, YSRCP leaders alleged TDP men ransacked a polling station in Yelamanda village and damaged the furniture. Police personnel were also preventing YSRCP sympathisers from entering into the polling booth, they alleged.

Minor trouble was also reported at a few other constituencies in Guntur, Prakasam and Anantapuramu districts as well, but neither the election authorities nor the police confirmed the reports.

State Chief Electoral Officer Gopal Krishna Dwivedi, however, said polling was going on peacefully across the state.

In a statement, Dwivedi asked people not to believe in rumours as the poll process was going on peacefully. He said the technical defects in EVMs, reported from various places, have been rectified.

Chief Minister N. Chandrababu Naidu and his family members exercised their franchise at a polling station in Undavalli village in state capital region Amaravati.

His son, Nara Lokesh, incidentally, is the TDP candidate from Mangalagiri Assembly segment that covers Undavalli. Talking to reporters, Naidu referred to technical glitches in EVMs and said he was demanding that ballot papers be re-introduced. "No developed country is using EVMs as they are prone to manipulation. We have, hence, been demanding that we revert to the ballot paper system," Naidu said.

YSRCP president Y.S. Jagan Mohan Reddy cast his vote in his native Pulivendula in Kadapa district, from where he is seeking re-election. "I am very confident that people are looking for a change," Jagan, who is aspiring for the chief minister's post, remarked.

Jana Sena president Pawan Kalyan exercised his franchise in Vijayawada. State Chief Secretary L.V. Subrahmanyam also cast his vote in Vijayawada. Dwivedi cast his vote in Tadepalli. Interestingly, the VVPAT machine did not function when Dwivedi voted.

This is the first general election in the state after the bifurcation of Andhra Pradesh and creation of Telangana in June 2014.

There are a total of 3,93,45,717 registered voters, including 1,94,62,339 men, 1,98,79,421 women and 3,957 transgenders. Of the total, 10.15 lakh are first-time voters in the 18-19 age group.

As many as 2,118 and 319 candidates are in the fray for 175 Assembly and 25 Lok Sabha seats respectively.

Polling would end at 5pm in the Maoist-affected areas, mostly those bordering Odisha and Chhattisgarh.