West Bengal Elections Witness Record 92 Percent Turnout Amid Isolated Violence
West Bengal elections saw 92% turnout across 152 constituencies and 44k polling stations under CAPF security; violence in Murshidabad included clashes, bomb blast, stone pelting; EC ordered repolling in 60+ booths across 4 districts on Apr 26; Opposition alleged intimidation and voter list deletions affecting up to 91 lakh voters, others defended fairness; high turnout ahead Phase 2 on Apr 29.
Polling across more than 44,000 polling stations proceeded largely smoothly under heavy deployment of Central Armed Police Forces security. However, violence erupted primarily in Murshidabad, where supporters of the Trinamool Congress and AUJP clashed, involving a bomb blast and stone pelting incidents.
The Election Commission ordered repolling at over 60 booths across four districts scheduled for April 26, following multiple complaints of disturbances during the voting process.
Opposition parties alleged large-scale intimidation and deletion of names from voter lists, claiming that up to 9.1 million voters were affected. However, other political stakeholders defended the electoral process as fair and transparent.
Despite tensions and allegations, the exceptionally high turnout reflects strong civic engagement across the state ahead of Phase 2 of polling scheduled for April 29.
The combination of record participation and isolated violence underscores both heightened democratic engagement and persistent electoral tensions in West Bengal.

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