Modi among tens of millions to vote in India's 'Super Tuesday' polls
Tens of millions of Indians, including Prime Minister Narendra Modi, voted on India's “Super Tuesday” in the latest round of polls when the biggest number of seats are decided in the country's marathon election.
Nearly 190 million voters were eligible to vote on 117 seats spread across 15 Indian states, stretching from the Himalayas to the Indian ocean, in the third of the seven phases of the mega polls.
The Election Commission was tabulating Tuesday's voting turnout. The New Delhi Television news channel put the voting percentage at around 66%.
Heavy security was put in place, with violent clashes erupting between rival groups in eastern India's West Bengal state, killing one political worker.
State election official Amit Yyoti Bhattaharya told AFP that a 30-year-old man was killed in the clashes near a polling booth in Murshidabad region.
According to The Associated Press, the Congress party said he was a party worker and was attacked by supporters of the All India Trinamool Congress, a regional party governing the state.
Television images showed some people exploding crude bombs outside a voting station, leading to the clash between rival groups and leaving two other people injured.
Suspected Maoists also detonated an improvised explosive device in neighbouring Jharkhand state without causing any damage.
Four people were killed in poll-related violence during the first phase of voting on April 11.
After casting his ballot in his home state of Gujarat, which he ruled for over a decade before leading his party to national power in 2014, Modi compared the experience of voting to the Hindu practice of cleansing sins by bathing in the Ganges river.
“By voting, I feel the same sense of purity that one gets by taking a bath at the Kumbh festival,” he said.
In an apparent reference to the Easter Sunday attacks in neighboring Sri Lanka, Modi told reporters, “The weapon of terrorism is IED (improvised explosive devices) and the strength of democracy is voter ID (identification cards). I can say with surety that the voter ID is much more powerful than an IED.”
The nationalist leader, who is seeking a second term, met his 98-year-old mother and then waved to supporters from an open top car that took him to vote in Ahmedabad, Gujarat's main city.