Close X
Friday, October 11, 2024
ADVT 
India

JNU Records 59% Polling Amid 'Azaadi' Chants And 'Dafli' Beats

Darpan News Desk IANS, 10 Sep, 2016 02:18 PM
  • JNU Records 59% Polling Amid 'Azaadi' Chants And 'Dafli' Beats
Chants of 'azaadi' and beats of traditional 'daflis' marked the polling day at Jawaharlal Nehru University (JNU) which recorded a voter turnout of over 59 per cent in its students' union polls, up by around 6 per cent from last year.
 
A turnout of 53.3 per cent was recorded last year in the JNUSU polls which are being closely watched this year in the aftermath of the recent controversies which surrounded the campus.
 
"The poll process went off peacefully. The voter turnout was 59.6 per cent. While 8600 students were registered on the electoral rolls, the total number of votes polled was 4481," said Ishita Mana, Chief Election Commissioner for JNUSU polls.
 
The voting, which began on a slow note in the first half of the day, gained momentum post lunch as students queued up to cast their ballot.
 
More campaigners were spotted outside polling booths than voters. Shouting of slogans, display of handmade posters and distribution of pamphlets marked the occassion. Students were seen dancing to the beats of traditional dafli (small drum).
 
Two representatives of the Visually Challenged Students' Forum in JNU, assisted the visually impaired students as they cast their ballot using an interactive HTML portal, which was introduced last year.
 
The counting of votes will begin amid security tonight after 9 pm and results are expected to come on September 11.
 
A total of 18 candidates are testing their electoral fortunes for the Central Panel and 79 are in fray for the post of councillors.
 
The JNUSU polls, a keenly fought contest, have been hogging more limelight this year against the backdrop of the February 9 event during which "anti-national" slogans were allegedly raised. The incident had led to the arrest of outgoing JNUSU president Kanhaiya Kumar and two others.

MORE India ARTICLES

Meat Ban Creates Stir In Mumbai, Quiet Ban In Rajasthan

Meat Ban Creates Stir In Mumbai, Quiet Ban In Rajasthan
A four-day ban on meat in Mumbai -- in view of a Jain religious festival -- stirred huge protests in India's financial capital on Thursday, while the measure was quietly enforced in Rajasthan.

Meat Ban Creates Stir In Mumbai, Quiet Ban In Rajasthan

India Calls In Saudi Envoy For Cooperation In Rape Probe

India Calls In Saudi Envoy For Cooperation In Rape Probe
India on Thursday called in the Saudi ambassador here to seek his cooperation in the police investigation being carried out into allegations of rape levelled against a senior Saudi diplomat by two Nepalese women.

India Calls In Saudi Envoy For Cooperation In Rape Probe

FTII Row: Ante Upped With Letter To President, Students On Hunger Strike

FTII Row: Ante Upped With Letter To President, Students On Hunger Strike
In a letter to the president, the signitories urged him president to declare FTII a centre of excellence, de-link it from the information and broadcasting ministry and grant it autonomy.

FTII Row: Ante Upped With Letter To President, Students On Hunger Strike

Saudi Diplomat, Family Charged With Rape, Torture In India, Embassy Cries Foul

Saudi Diplomat, Family Charged With Rape, Torture In India, Embassy Cries Foul
A diplomat at the Saudi Arabia embassy in New Delhi has been booked for rape while his wife and daughter have been booked for torturing domestic helps in this Millennium City, Haryana Police said Tuesday.

Saudi Diplomat, Family Charged With Rape, Torture In India, Embassy Cries Foul

PM Modi Urges India Inc To Keep Investment Flow Going

PM Modi Urges India Inc To Keep Investment Flow Going
The prime minister said that somebody's pain shouldn't be our gain. Instead, we should make our own efforts domestically to take up the opportunities from the current global situation

PM Modi Urges India Inc To Keep Investment Flow Going

Ontario Schools Resume With Less Turmoil, But Some Labour Strife Remains

Ontario Schools Resume With Less Turmoil, But Some Labour Strife Remains
Ontario schools resume this week in a more stable state than when they closed in June amid the threat of massive teachers' strikes, but it will not be entirely problem-free with work-to-rule campaigns and controversy over a new sex-education curriculum lingering.

Ontario Schools Resume With Less Turmoil, But Some Labour Strife Remains