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Victory for Trinamool in West Bengal; DMK wins in Tamil Nadu; Left in Kerala; BJP keeps Assam

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Victory for Trinamool in West Bengal; DMK wins in Tamil Nadu; Left in Kerala; BJP keeps Assam 2

The opposition DMK-Congress alliance has won in the Tamil Nadu assembly elections. Actor Kamal Haasan and his Makkal Needhi Maiam or MNM, made a rather drab electoral debut in the 2019 general election, failing to win a single seat. This time, Haasan was trailing.

The people saw this election as a choice between the BJP and BJP-controlled alliances and that of the DMK, which stands to oppose the BJP and its ideology. The DMK has also won in constituencies including Kurinjipadi, Neyveli, Virudhachalam. The BJP’s state unit chief L Murugan was ahead in Dharapuram and AIADMK leaders and state ministers KC Veeramani and Benjamin were ahead in Jolarpet and Maduravoyal.

Assembly election results in 2021, clear that BJP will form govt in Assam. Congress leading the alliance with the Asom Gana Parishad (AGP), the United People’s Party Liberal (UPPL) and the Gana Suraksha Party (GSP), which mainly represent the Bodo and Sarania communities respectively, the BJP faced stiff competition from two corners this year: the first being the Congress-led Grand Alliance of which the minority-backed All India United Democratic Front, the Bodoland People’s Front, which had control over the Bodoland Territorial Council for nearly two decades, and marginal players such as Anchalik Gana Morcha, Communist Party of India (Marxist), CPI and CPI (Marxist-Leninist); the other was from two newly formed regional parties — the Assam Jatiya Parishad (AJP) and the Raijor Dal which emerged out of the anti-Citizenship Amendment Act protests that swept Assam in 2019.

On the other hand, change of guard is all set to happen after 10 years in Tamil Nadu with the DMK-led alliance coasting towards an emphatic victory in the 2021 Assembly polls. The DMK, led by its President M.K. Stalin won maximum Assembly constituencies and it formed the government on its own. The DMK-led alliance has notched up a comfortable lead routing the AIADMK front across the state barring the western belt where the latter is holding its own. With poll victory in sight, DMK cadres assembled at the party headquarters here and celebrated by bursting crackers and dancing, with no adherence to Covid-19 safety protocols.

The party cadres are visibly happy as DMK is expected to maintain the lead and finally win the poll to capture power in the state after a decade. According to Election Commission data, the DMK secured 37.2 per cent of the votes polled and with allies, it was about 43 per cent while the AIADMK got 33.5 per cent and along with allies, it was about 41 per cent. The AIADMK has put up a good performance despite the expectations/predictions to the contrary. The party had the issue of dual leadership (Coordinator O. Panneerselvam, Joint Coordinator K. Palaniswami), and anti-BJP sentiments in the state.

In 2019 there was an anti-Modi wave in Tamil Nadu. But in the 2021 Assembly elections, Stalin was at the centre stage but there was no wave in his favour to rout the AIADMK. One interesting aspect of this Assembly poll is the NTK party that has emerged as a third force in many constituencies after the DMK and the AIADMK.

As the counting of votes of Puducherry assembly election 2021 were underway. The 15th legislative polls in Puducherry, which is currently under the President’s rule, decide the fate of 324 candidates across the 30 constituencies. The V Narayanasamy-led Congress government collapsed in February 2021. The four districts consisting of 30 seats voted on April 6 to elect a new chief minister.  The four districts comprise Puducherry, Karaikal, Mahe and Yanam.  BJP won here undoubtedly.

In West Bengal, Mamata Banerjee is likely to return as the Chief Minister for the third consecutive term with the TMC leading in over 200 seats. In Tamil Nadu, MK Stalin is set to become the state Chief Minister with the DMK-led alliance leading in over 140 seats. In Kerala, the Pinarayai Vijayan-led LDF government looks set to create history by becoming the first government to fight incumbency and retain power in the state. The Congress, meanwhile, had a dismal performance in the state, with the UDF leading in only 41 seats at present. In Assam, the BJP is set to have a second term with the party’s alliance leading in 76 of the 126 seats while the Congress alliance is leading in 48. In Puducherry, the NRC+ alliance is inching towards the halfway mark with leads in 12 seats.


‘Didi O Didi’ – Congratulations on winning the toughest political battle

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File Photo of Mamata Banerjee

The Minorities and Mahila mixture has driven Mamata Banerjee to cross the halfway mark. Muslims account for more than 35 per cent of the population and influence the outcome of 95 seats out of 294. However, Mamata lost a most crucial fight in Bengal’s Nandigram seat to BJP’s Suvendu Adhikari, her former right-hand man.

Mamata joins the league of Nitish Kumar, Naveen Patnaik and Arvind Kejriwal who have humbled Modi. Amit Shah and Modi invested a lot of political capital in the state leading the campaign and this result is a setback of sorts for the duo. The two jointly held 51 rallies/road shows covering all districts of the state.

Nandigram is the town that catapulted Mamata Banerjee to power for the first time in 2011 and winning here serves as a big message to aides – mainly Mr Adhikari — who ditched her this time to cross over to the BJP.

The results for the West Bengal assembly elections are trickling in and the Trinamool Congress (TMC) looks all set to retain power despite battling 10 years of anti-incumbency, a Hindu awakening and lower caste consolidation in favour of the BJP. The exit polls have again gone wrong (after Bihar last year) as most of them predicted a close contest and failed to pick this wave in favour of Mamata.

Shiv Sena MP Sanjay Raut said, “This win was expected and inspiring. One lady single-handedly gave a tough fight to BJP is no joke. She proved her capacities and shrunk the nasty political perspectives in one go”.

BJP’s over-reliance on Modi damaged the party’s prospects. It didn’t have candidates for all seats and gave tickets to 130 turncoats from other parties relying mainly on the top leadership’s campaign. Modi’s new getup as Rabindranath Tagore has not gone well with Bengal voters. Above all his cheap style of campaign and constant personal attacks boomeranged on him.

BJP failed to deflate the insider versus outsider campaign of the TMC, especially in the urban and semi-urban seats. The Bengali Asmita factor worked for the TMC. The rising cases of coronavirus in Bengal and Mamata’s accusation that the BJP is responsible for the same clicked with the urban audience which was impacted.

Samajwadi Party chief Akhilesh Yadav, NCP chief Sharad Pawar and Delhi CM Arvind Kejriwal among others sent out congratulatory messages for Mamata on social media. Following up, Rajnath Singh tweeted, “Congratulations to the Chief Minister of West Bengal, @MamataOfficial Didi on her party’s victory in West Bengal assembly elections. My best wishes to her for her next tenure.”

Dipanjan Ghosh, Afternoon Voice’s West Bengal correspondent said, “Hats off to this great woman. She fought all sorts of relentless personal attacks on her and her party and still emerged victorious. For Modi, Amit shah Bengal defeat will wrinkle for a long time to come. Unless BJP develops good local leaders and works for the people’s welfare in states where it’s weak, they will continue to lose assembly elections. Even today for the Lok Sabha elections people will vote for Modi. Modi must understand attacking women in a personal way will not be liked by the electorate of this country.”

Pandharpur bypolls: BJP’s Samadhan Autade all set to win against NCP’s Bhagirath Bhalke

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Pandharpur bypolls: BJP’s Samadhan Autade all set to win against NCP’s Bhagirath Bhalke 5

BJP’s Samadhan Autade is all set to win over his NCP rival Bhagirath Bhalke in the bypoll to Pandharpur-Mangalvedha Assembly seat in Maharashtra’s Solapur district.

“At the end of the 34th round, NCP candidate Bhagirath Bhalke bagged 97,212 votes, while BJP’s Samadhan Autade polled 1,01,607 votes, taking the lead of 4,354 votes,” a district election official said.

As per district poll officials, there are total38 rounds of counting.

The NCP and the BJP are locked in a direct fight in the bypoll, which was necessitated following the death of NCP legislator Bharat Bhalke due to post-COVID-19 complications in November last year.

The Nationalist Congress Party (NCP) fielded Bhagirath Bhalke, the late MLA’s son, against BJP’s Samadhan Autade, who had contested the 2019 Assembly elections as an Independent and the 2014 polls on the Shiv Sena ticket.

Political observers feel the bypoll will test the popularity of the Maha Vikas Aghadi (MVA) allies – Shiv Sena, NCP, and Congress – three ideologically different parties which have been sharing power in the state for the last one- and-a-half years.

Over 66 per cent voting was recorded during polling held in the constituency on April 17, as per the Election Commission.

”The counting staff has been provided sanitisers, masks and gloves. Social distancing is being maintained and only candidates and their polling agents are allowed inside the counting centre,” he said.

Section 144 of the CrPC, prohibiting the assembly of five or more people at one place, has already been imposed and no victory celebration is allowed outside the counting centre, the collector said.

Adequate police security has been deployed outside the counting centre, he added.

West Bengal elections: Sharad Pawar congratulates Mamata as TMC emerges victorious

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West Bengal elections: Sharad Pawar congratulates Mamata as TMC emerges victorious 7

NCP supremo Sharad Pawar on Sunday congratulated Mamata Banerjee, whose party TMC was striding way ahead of the BJP in the counting of votes for the West Bengal Assembly polls.

The Trinamool Congress (TMC) was ahead in 202 of the 292 seats that went to polls in West Bengal, way over the halfway mark of 147, leaving the BJP trailing far behind in 77 seats.

“Congratulations @MamataOfficial on your stupendous victory! Let us continue our work towards the welfare of people and tackling the Pandemic collectively,” tweeted Pawar, whose party shares power with the Shiv Sena and Congress in Maharashtra.

Though the TMC seemed to have successfully ridden the BJP challenge, it could well be a bittersweet moment for Chief Minister Banerjee herself with trends showing she was trailing behind her one-time loyalist and now BJP candidate Suvendu Adhikari in Nandigram by about 3,700 votes.

In terms of vote share, the TMC had 48.5 per cent of the votes against the BJP’s 37.4 per cent.

Trends suggest TMC likely to cross halfway mark in West Bengal

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Trends suggest TMC likely to cross halfway mark in West Bengal 9

As the day progressed, the ruling Trinamool Congress seemed to have an advantage in the race as the Trinamool Congress is leading in 202 seats while the Bharatiya Janata Party is leading in 77 seats as per the initial trends. The trends pointing towards TMC crossing the halfway mark in the state having 294 assembly seats.

The counting of votes in the state has begun on Sunday at 8 am following the COVID-19 protocol. The early trends showed that West Bengal CM Mamata Banerjee is trailing from the Nandigram seat.

Bengal witnessed a fierce contest between the ruling Trinamool Congress and BJP across eight phases. The Samyukta Morcha comprising the Congress, Left parties and ISF has also tried to put up a strong fight. The BJP has made a concerted attempt to dislodge the TMC. The Election Commission has made necessary arrangements for counting. The counting is taking place amid an unprecedented surge in COVID-19 cases in the country.

Several surveys gave an edge to the ruling Trinamool Congress (TMC). In West Bengal, all exit polls predicted that the BJP would make major inroads and a few also said that the party would emerge victoriously. Times Now-C voter exit poll predicted 158 seats for TMC, 115 for BJP and 19 for others. ABP-C Voter predicted TMC to get 152-164 seats, BJP 109-121 seats and Left-Congress alliance 14-25 seats.

According to the Republic-CNX exit poll, BJP with 138-148 seats has an edge over TMC which is predicted to get 128-138 seats. As per India TV- People’s Pulse, BJP is expected to get 173-192 seats while TMC will be reduced to 64-88 seats and the Left-Congress alliance will get 7-12 seats.

Axis My India predicted a hung assembly in Bengal with the ruling TMC expected to get 130-156 seats and BJP 134-160 seats.

BJP will form govt in Assam, says CM Sarbananda Sonowal ahead of poll results

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BJP will form govt in Assam, says CM Sarbananda Sonowal ahead of poll results 11

Assam Chief Minister Sarbananda Sonowal is confident of retaining power in the state as the trends suggest Bharatiya Janata Party leading. “As per the trends, it is clear that Bharatiya Janata Party will form the government in Assam with United People’s Party, Liberal (UPPL),” Sonowal told ANI on Sunday.

Sonowal further said, “This is the result of the support of the people. We have to wait till the vote-counting is complete but the trend shows that the people are on our side.” The counting of votes in 126 seats in the state is underway.

As per the latest trend, Sonowal is leading in the Majuli constituency while Rajib Lochan Pegu, who is the candidate of Congress in the same constituency, is trailing. The ruling Bharatiya Janata Party is leading in 60 seats while Congress is leading in 26 seats.

The election schedule spread across four states and one Union Territory began on March 27 and continued till April 29. The polling across Assam took place in three phases. The voting for the 126 constituencies in the state for the first phase in the state was held on March 27, the second on April 1, and the third phase was held on April 6.

Over the three phases, the main players, the BJP and Congress-led Mahajot have been made significant efforts to woo voters. The Bharatiya Janata Party (BJP) is seeking a second term after a thumping win in the 2016 elections where the party ended Tarun Gogoi-led Congress’ 15-year rule when it won 86 out of 126 seats.

According to exit polls, Bharatiya Janata Party (BJP) can form the government for the second consecutive term in the state. Prime Minister Narendra Modi, Union Minister Amit Shah, and Rajnath Singh were among the big names from BJP who tried to woo voters during the election campaign. Congress leader Priyanka Gandhi too campaigned in the state.

Tributes to my media fraternity members who left us during COVID-19

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Tributes to my media fraternity members who left us during COVID-19 13

From 2020 March to 2021 April hundreds of journalists succumbed to the coronavirus pandemic. Every day an average one journalist lost life which is not only shocking but heartbreaking. The total number of verified COVID-19 positive journalist’s deaths from 1 April 2020 to 30 April 2021 mounted to 103.

The state of Uttar Pradesh has the highest recorded death of media persons with 19 deaths, followed by Telangana at 17, and Maharashtra at 15. These are the number of those journalists who were known and had identity due to their banner, but freelance writers who actually did ground reporting and who no less than mainstream journalists reported about pandemic passed away without any mentions.

Covid has infected over 3.86 lakh more people in India, yet another disturbing daily high and killed 3,498 in the last 24 hours. The record number comes even as a huge international aid operation has been launched with many countries promising help. Maharashtra reported 66,159 new cases and 771 deaths as of now. The Mumbai civic body has cited vaccine shortage and said it is stopping vaccination for three days.

The politics is heated up, India with such a high number of COVID cases has exposed the medical infrastructure. Political blame games and diverting tactics could not erase the fact that there is no preparedness in the central government to battle the pandemic. After Maharashtra, Kerala, Karnataka, Uttar Pradesh, Tamil Nadu and Delhi have the highest number of infections.

April 2021 which has seen the unabated rise of cases in what is being termed India’s ‘Second Wave’ has also been the worst for journalists, cops, medical staff, front line warriors in India. On average, two journalists have died every day this month.

Whichever newspaper or news channel one sees the horrible coverages of pandemic taking people’s peace away. Even if mainstream media is trying to hide something, social media is doing its job of post circulations and spamming quite aggressively. There is panic in people, a second wave of the pandemic has made people hopeless.

Social media, on the other hand, is an unfolding drapery of calamity. People beg for help finding hospital beds and life-saving medicines. Friends and acquaintances call and text asking if you know where they can get an oxygen concentrator for the home. In one way or another, everyone is battling the virus.

Everyone, it seems, except the Indian state. Once again, ordinary citizens feel as if we’ve been abandoned by our administrations. Even in the face of an unparalleled emergency, state and federal officials seem more interested in point-scoring and blame-shifting than in cooperation.

No one ever imagined such fragile Indian states. There’s no escaping the essential incongruity of 21st century India. It is one of the world’s largest economies, determined and ambitious, and its government has vast resources. But it is still a poor country with a per capita income of one-fifth China’s. The state’s capabilities are spread truly thinly across India’s billion-plus people.

Huge money got deposited to the welfare funds of the Prime minister and Chief ministers, but the tragedy is that the government preferred to spend all its money on election campaigns by making people vulnerable to COVID infection but they did not give a thought to people’s safety. The crowd was in pain to attend the rallies.

Previous lockdowns really shrunk the pockets of people. Many remained penniless, jobless. They preferred the threat of infection and death by being part of election rallies. Government spending on health, in particular, has always been shockingly low. In the villages of Uttar Pradesh, the needs of hundreds of thousands of people might be filled by just five health centres — and not a single qualified doctor.

And citizens need more than the basics. In Delhi, the local government often talks up its expenditure on primary health centres, which are indeed vital. But that hasn’t made up for the lack of tertiary care, which is what most Covid-19 patients need. According to the official dashboard, Delhi has only 5,000 usable ICU beds for its roughly 20 million citizens; less than a dozen were free on April 30. India has a younger population than most other countries, and there was discussion of preexisting immunity among the population. The government gave importance to Kumbh Mela, stadium inaugurations, public gatherings and they miserably failed to protect people.


(Any suggestions, comments or dispute with regards to this article send us at feedback@www.afternoonvoice.com)

Journalist organisations geared up to address job losses

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Journalist organisations geared up to address job losses 15

“Journalists have been facing the full brunt of the Coronavirus. Many of our colleagues have been hospitalized, and sadly we have lost many friends too. The worst aspect is that instead of standing by us, most employers have used this opportunity to rationalize their businesses and retrench many employees. They have fired hundreds of our colleagues and cut their wages too. The central and state governments have offered tacit support to this bloodbath and have remained mute spectators”, says AiMea Gen Secretary, Ajayshree Ghate.

To take stock of the current situation and to make illustrations to respective authorities, a joint meeting of various journalist’s organisations such as Mumbai Press Club, Mumbai Marathi Patrakar Sangh, Mantralaya And Vidhimandal Vartahar Sangh, Bombay News Photographers Association, TV Journalists Association, All India Media Employees Association (AiMea), Mumbai Mahanagar Palika Patrakar Sangh and Marathi Patrakar Parishad held a meeting to discuss various concerns related to the scribes of state.

The meeting took note of the high toll COVID has taken, especially among field journalists, both in the number of deaths and those who faced serious illness and hospitalization. Therefore, it was decided to compile a list of working journalists who have lost their lives over the last year in Mumbai and Maharashtra. They will share the list with both central agencies like the Press Council of India (which has set up a special committee to study the problem of job losses during the pandemic) as well the Press Information Bureau for the assistance under the Journalist Welfare Scheme.

It was also decided to compile a list of journalists who have lost their jobs in the past year in Maharashtra by termination or by forced resignation. This list will be submitted to the Press Council of India for further action. Members and journalists are requested to furnish details.

The Task Force of journalist organisations, it was decided, would also work towards setting up a ‘War Room’ with secretarial support to track and provide help wherever possible for journalists. It was also decided to request the Maharashtra government to appoint a nodal officer and a panel of doctors to help journalists and their family members in case of COVID related emergencies.

The meeting condemned the Maharashtra government for not providing recognition as ‘Essential Workers’ to journalists and for excluding them from using public transport during the lockdown. While the Press Club and other organisations have written letters to the Government of Maharashtra in this respect, it was decided to lead a delegation to the Hon’ Chief Minister to demand journalists be given due professional respect including the right to use public transport.

RIP Dear Scribes – 55 journalists in India lost their lives due to COVID-19 in the last 30 days

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RIP Dear Scribes - 55 journalists in India lost their lives due to COVID-19 in the last 30 days 17

Fifteen prominent journalists of Maharashtra have succumbed to COVID-19 infection so far. Recently, Senior photojournalist Vivek Bendre was working for The Hindu along with 3 other senior journalists lost their battle with COVID-19 on Sunday.

Sadanand Shinde for Navakal, Sukhnandan Gavai for Ulhasnagar daily and Jairam Sawant, assistant editor for Dainik Sagar, also died COVID-19. April 2021 which has seen the unabated rise of cases in what is being termed India’s ‘Second Wave’ has also been the worst for journalists in India, with 55 deaths being reported in just the last 28 days alone.

This implies that on average, two journalists have died every day this month. According to a study, conducted by the Delhi-based Institute of Perception Studies, as many as 102 journalists have succumbed to COVID-19 between 1 April 2020 and 30 April 2021. The recent news is about Aaj Tak’s senior journalist Rohit Sardana.

In Maharashtra Senior journalist Sopan Bongane, Motichand Bedmutha from Osmanabad, Ashok Tupe from Pune, Fatima R Zakaria, a freelance journalist, Pandurang Raikar of TV9 Marathi, Kailassinh Pardeshi of Saamana, Haresh Munwani veteran sports journalist, Javed Jivani former Arab News staffer, Ashok Churi of Palghar Times, Roshan Dias of TV9, Rahul Dolare succumbed to COVID-19.

COVID-19: Mumbai’s test positivity rate drops below 10 per cent

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Image Courtesy: Afternoon Voice / Akshay Redij

In an encouraging sign, the COVID-19 test positivity rate in Mumbai has dropped below 10 per cent, municipal commissioner Iqbal Singh Chahal said on Friday.

According to Chahal, Mumbai’s positivity rate was 9.94 per cent on April 29, when 4,328 people tested positive for COVID-19 out of 43,525 those samples were examined.

The test positivity rate (TPR) is defined as the proportion of samples that return positive among the total tested.

“Our positivity rate is in single-digit now with nearly 44,000 tests. Perhaps, Mumbai is the only city in India with a single-digit positivity rate with high testing,” Chahal claimed.

Highlighting that 85 per cent of the new cases are asymptomatic, the IAS officer said the number of vacant beds available in city hospitals increased to 5,725 on Friday afternoon, indicating a drop in fresh admissions.

According to the data provided by Chahal, who took charge of the BMC during the pandemic last year, Mumbai had a TPR of 20.85 per cent at the beginning of April.

The highest positivity rate during the month was 27.94 per cent, reported on April 4, when 11,573 people had tested positive after 51,313 samples were examined.

The data suggested that the test positivity rate started slipping below 20 per cent from April 19.

Earlier this week, Dr Shashank Joshi, a member of the Maharashtra government’s COVID-19 task force, had said Mumbai may have turned the corner in its fight against the pandemic.

He had said the turnaround was due to the metropolis tackling the surge in cases during the second wave of the infection with the ”ATM strategy”, which is ‘Assess, Triage and Transfer, and Management.