This story is from February 9, 2017

Paramilitary at every Majitha booth for repoll

After courting a row over widespread failure of voter verified paper audit trail (VVPAT) machines at Majitha constituency on February 4, a cautious Election Commission (EC) on Wednesday deployed paramilitary forces outside all booths for Thursday’s repoll.
Paramilitary at every Majitha booth for repoll
(Representative image)
CHANDIGARH: After courting a row over widespread failure of voter verified paper audit trail (VVPAT) machines at Majitha constituency on February 4, a cautious Election Commission (EC) on Wednesday deployed paramilitary forces outside all booths for Thursday’s repoll. Forty-eight polling stations, including 16 for the Amritsar Lok Sabha, seat will see polling again.
According to EC deployment, a full section of Central Armed Police Force (CAPF) troops will guard each of the 16 booths in Majitha.
1x1 polls
A full section means eight CAPF troops, while half section means four troops. “We don’t want to leave anything to chance now. We have ensured a level playing field for all parties now,” said Punjab chief electoral officer (CEO) V K Singh.
Additionally, three IPS officers led by 2014-batch cop Gaurav Toora will also move around the booths. Each patrolling car of surveillance has been given two wireless sets. “It’s like a garrison town now,” said an Amritsar poll officer.
EC has also handpicked many officers of the rank of sub-divisional magistrates (SDMs) and additional district magistrates (ADMs) from varied backgrounds to oversee the process. Majitha is one of the star constituencies in Punjab where Shiromani Akali Dal (SAD) supremo Sukhbir Singh Badal’s brother-in-law Bikram Singh Majithia, Himmat Singh Shergill of the Aam Aadmi Party (AAP) and Congress candidate Sukhjinder Raj Singh Lalli Majithia have locked horns. Voters will cast their ballots again on Thursday because the much-touted VVPAT machines malfunctioned in Majitha, hampering the election process.
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About the Author
Rohan Dua

Rohan Dua is an Assistant Editor with Times of India. As an itinerant reporter, he has walked a marathon from rustic farms to idyllic terrains across Punjab, Haryana and Himachal Pradesh to report extensively on the filial politics, village triumphs and palace intrigues. He likes to sneak into, snoop and sniff out offices for investigative scoops, some of which led to breakthrough probes in the Railgate, Applegate, AW chopper scam, IPL fixing and drug scam. His stories nailed Pakistan's involvement with damning evidence in two Punjab terror attacks at Pathankot and Gurdaspur.

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