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Lok Sabha Elections 2024: Long queues outside polling booths in Assam; Sonowal, Gogoi vote earlyGogoi voted at a polling booth in Devi Charan Barua Higher Secondary School in Jorhat town.
PTI
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<div class="paragraphs"><p>Jorhat: Congress candidate Gaurav Gogoi casts his vote for the first phase of Lok Sabha&nbsp;elections, in Jorhat district, Friday, April 19, 2024. </p></div>

Jorhat: Congress candidate Gaurav Gogoi casts his vote for the first phase of Lok Sabha elections, in Jorhat district, Friday, April 19, 2024.

Credit: PTI Photo

Long queues were seen outside booths since the morning as polling was underway for five constituencies in Assam in the first phase on Friday.

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Poling began at 7 am in Dibrugarh, Jorhat, Lakhimpur, Sonitpur and Kaziranga seats, and 86.5 lakh voters are eligible to vote.

Union Minister Sarbananda Sonowal of the BJP and Congress's deputy leader in Lok Sabha Gaurav Gogoi were among those who cast their votes in the first hour.

There were apprehensions that the weather might play a spoilsport with the entire Upper Assam remaining cloudy, but gradually the sky cleared up.

"It is really a good sign that people are coming out in such a large number. People's spontaneous participation will strengthen democracy," Sonowal, the BJP candidate of Dibrugarh, said after casting his vote at a polling booth in Laxminath Bezbarua Bhawan in Chowkiding.

People are happy under the leadership of PM Narendra Modi and that is why they are coming out in large numbers, he claimed.

Gogoi voted at a polling booth in Devi Charan Barua Higher Secondary School in Jorhat town.

Among the other prominent persons who cast their votes early were Sonowal's rival Lurinjyoti Gogoi in Tinsukia district, BJP's Sonitpur candidate Ranjit Dutta in Behali, Kaziranga's Congress contestant Roselina Tirkey in Sarupathar and BJP's Lakhimpur candidate Pradan Baruah in Dhemaji.

Keep up with the Lok Sabha 2024 elections here

State Congress president Bhupen Kumar Bora voted at a booth in Deotala ME School in Bihpuria.

'I reached the voting centre at 6 am. I didn't want to miss the election. This is my only choice to decide my future,' 20-year-old Akhtara Begum said while standing in the queue at a voting centre in Jorhat.

The total number of polling stations in the first phase is 10,001, of which 92 are model polling stations, 11 are PwD-managed and 752 are female-managed centres. Webcasting was available at 5,509 polling stations.

Lankeswar Barua, a 100-year-old senior citizen, decided not to opt for home voting and went along with his wife to a booth in Naharkatia in Dibrugarh.

'Who said I am old? I can come myself and vote. I have never voted from home, why should I when I can walk around?' he told reporters.

Reports of EVM malfunctioning came from at least three polling booths of Bihpuria in Lakhimpur, one each in Hojai, Kaliabor and Bokakhat, and one in Naharkatia of Dibrugarh, an official said.

'Most of the glitches were noticed during the mock poll, which started 90 minutes before the commencement of the actual voting. Those glitches were rectified immediately. Voting started sometime late in those booths and now it is going smoothly,' he said.

A total of 40,004 polling personnel are engaged in the first phase, with a posse of security personnel from state and central forces.

In total, 35 candidates are in the fray in the five constituencies.

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(Published 19 April 2024, 10:16 IST)