Binay Tamang, the candidate of the Gorkha Janmukti Morcha Head |
In the Darjeeling Assembly byelection on Sunday, it was all about fingers.
Candidates seemed careful while displaying their inked middle finger for the fear of conveying the wrong message.
Darjeeling
had last voted in the Lok Sabha polls on April 18 and voters’ index
finger had been inked then. On Sunday, the authorities marked the middle
fingers of voters, making it talking point through the day.
Binay Tamang, the candidate of the Gorkha Janmukti Morcha camp headed
by him, and K.B. Wattar, CPM nominee, displayed their inked middle
fingers and within moments, Tamang’s photo went viral. Tamang voted
around 7am.
Then came the play of fingers. Amar Lama, JAP
candidate who voted around 7.30am, showed all five fingers, as did Mann
Ghisingh, the GNLF president.
Sarada Rai Subba, an Independent,
first showed a single finger to change it to two fingers before settling
for three in a matter of seconds.
Neeraj Zimba, BJP candidate,
and Independent Swaraj Thapa played safe, displaying both the index and
middle fingers. People were seen commenting that while Thapa’s gesture
looked like a victory sign, Zimba’s gesture, some said looked like
someone pointing a gun.
After the initial blooper, Tamang posed before photographers, flashing the victory sign.
While
leaders were careful about their photographers, many voters brought in a
“fun element” into play and posted pictures consciously displaying
their inked middle finger.
Apart from this finger hiccup, the
bypolls were largely “peaceful”. An altercation occurred between
supporters of the GNLF and Morcha (Binay camp) at Gandhi Road and there
was a skirmish between supporters of the two parties at Badamtam.
Tamang
said: “I would like to thank the authorities and all parties as the
polls were peaceful. I would also appeal to all to maintain the same
peaceful atmosphere during counting day.”
Binay’s arch-rival
Zimba, too, spoke on similar lines. “No major incidents were reported
and the polls were peaceful by and large. We did hear about few
instances of rigging.”
Independent Thapa and JAP nominee Lama
agreed the polls were largely peaceful but added that they had come
across discrepancies at some booths.
https://www.telegraphindia.com
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