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India minister Sharad Pawar: wipe off the ink and vote for us twice | India minister Sharad Pawar: wipe off the ink and vote for us twice |
(35 minutes later) | |
An Indian cabinet minister is at the centre of a vote-rigging row after he asked supporters to vote twice for his party in elections next month. | An Indian cabinet minister is at the centre of a vote-rigging row after he asked supporters to vote twice for his party in elections next month. |
Speaking at a rally on Sunday, the agriculture minister, Sharad Pawar, urged voters to wash off the ink that would be daubed on their fingers after casting their ballots then go to a different constituency and vote again for his Nationalist Congress party (NCP). | Speaking at a rally on Sunday, the agriculture minister, Sharad Pawar, urged voters to wash off the ink that would be daubed on their fingers after casting their ballots then go to a different constituency and vote again for his Nationalist Congress party (NCP). |
After pointing out that voting in two neighbouring parts of Maharashtra state was taking place on different days, Pawar told supporters in the state: "Vote for the Clock [his party's symbol] there and come back to vote for the Clock here as well." . | After pointing out that voting in two neighbouring parts of Maharashtra state was taking place on different days, Pawar told supporters in the state: "Vote for the Clock [his party's symbol] there and come back to vote for the Clock here as well." . |
The comments were seized upon by rivals in the elections, which begin on 7 April, including the anti-corruption Aam Aadmi party. | The comments were seized upon by rivals in the elections, which begin on 7 April, including the anti-corruption Aam Aadmi party. |
The party said it would complain to the election commission over the "blatant contravention" of its code of conduct. | The party said it would complain to the election commission over the "blatant contravention" of its code of conduct. |
Pawar, an ally of the ruling Congress party who has been flirting with the main opposition Bharatiya Janata party, tried to laugh off his remarks, saying they had been meant as a joke. | |
"Party workers get bored with the same cliched electoral speeches. The statement which I made earlier in the day was in a lighter vein," he said. | |
The NCP spokesman, DP Tripathi, said he was confident the election commission would understand the comments had not been serious. | The NCP spokesman, DP Tripathi, said he was confident the election commission would understand the comments had not been serious. |
"We are confident that they are very mature and will realise the context of the statement," Tripathi told AFP. | "We are confident that they are very mature and will realise the context of the statement," Tripathi told AFP. |
Polls show corruption is one of the most pressing concerns for voters in the world's biggest democracy, which will hold elections for its 543-member parliament in nine phases until 12 May. | Polls show corruption is one of the most pressing concerns for voters in the world's biggest democracy, which will hold elections for its 543-member parliament in nine phases until 12 May. |
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