I tried following the Indian elections on Twitter yesterday, searching both "India" and "Indian elections" for election news. News came fast from various sources. But the BBC was the best, providing live coverage, interactive maps as well as in-depth analysis.
Analysis and perspective have become more valuable than ever because breaking news is so easy to get.
That's why I wasn't tempted to post a video of the slipper hurled at the Hindu nationalist Bharatiya Janata Party leader Lal Krishna Advani, who wants to be India's next prime minister. (Videos here in Hindi and in English.)
Interestingly, almost half the eligible voters voted in Jammu and Kashmir -- and more than half in Arunachal Pradesh, which is claimed by China – according to the Hindu. Here's how Jammu and Kashmir was covered by the Chinese news agency, Xinhua. Thousands voted in Jammu, said another Xinhua report.
It was the Maoist rebels who waged a violent campaign to disrupt the polls, killing 16 people, including eight policemen, yesterday deep in the Indian countryside, reported The Times of India. Isn't that ironic? The worst-hit were the Maoist strongholds in Chattisgarh, Jharkhand and Bihar. The Maoists want revolution, not democracy.
The Hindu reports 58 to 62 percent turnout:
65 percent in Andhra Pradesh which includes the IT hub, Hyderabad; 62 percent in Arunachal Pradesh and Assam; 60 percent in Kerala; 50 percent in Uttar Pradesh, India's biggest state whose chief minister, Mayawati, wants to be the next prime minister; 48 percent in Jammu and Kashmir; and 46 percent in Bihar. Parts of Bihar are inside what the BBC calls the Red Corridor – controlled by the Maoists.
Curiously, the Election Commission of India is not giving polling percentages in the publicly accessible sections -- maybe because the elections don't end till May 13. Elections were held only in 124 of the 543 constituencies yesterday.
Apart from the BBC, the other go-to site is Rediff's India Votes 2009. The Hindustan Times has the most interactive features among the Indian newspaper sites.
The bad news:
- An Indian Justice Party election candidate was found hanging from a banyan tree, allegedy killed by a rival candidate. The 35-year-old Bahadur Sonkar, who was seeking election from Jaunpur near the Hindu holy city of Varanasi in the state of Uttar Pradesh, had been under pressure to withdraw from the contest and support the state's ruling Bahujan Samaj Party (BSP), reported the BBC. The BSP is headed by wannabe prime minister Mayawati.
- A BSP election candidate was arrested in the neighbouring state of Bihar last month for allegedly killing 10 policemen. Another BSP legislator was arrested last year for allegedly killing a government engineer for refusing to contribute money for Mayawati's birthday celebrations.
- The National Election Watch reports 222 election candidates -- 16 percent of the 1,425 people standing for election -- have criminal records. Congress is fielding 24, the BJP 23 and the BSP 17 candidates with criminal records.
Incidentally, the Communist Party of India (Marxist), which opposes America and supports China, wants a weaker Indian government. "We favour a truly federal structure in a country as vast as India," the Marxist leader Prakash Karat told the BBC. He wants more power for the states, three of which -- West Bengal, Kerala and Tripura -- have Marxist governments.
The CPI (M) has formed a Third Front with Mayawati and her BSP, the former Tamil film star Jayalalitha who leads the AIADMK strong in Tamil Nadu, and the Telugu Desam Party leader Chandra Babu Naidu who claims credit for the technology boom in Hyderabad. They make up the Third Front fighting the outgoing prime minister Manmohan Singh's Congress party as well as the opposition Hindu nationalist Bharatiya Janata Party.
Meanwhile. the Times of India website leads with the news: Heed India, young and affluent wake up to vote. The young and the rich are voting like never before, it reports from Hyderabad. Elections in the other big cities – New Delhi, Mumbai, Kolkata, Chennai and Bangalore – will be held later.
This Google map of India is useful, showing the places in the news as the elections continue.