City
Epaper

Old or young, persons with disabilities at forefront of voting in J&K polls

By IANS | Updated: September 25, 2024 18:30 IST

Jammu, Sep 25 Among crowds of enthusiastic voters as J&K voted in the second phase of the crucial ...

Open in App

Jammu, Sep 25 Among crowds of enthusiastic voters as J&K voted in the second phase of the crucial Assembly polls on Wednesday, persons with disabilities, both young and old, were at the forefront, including a teenager in Reasi district who had just turned 18.

Karmanya Sharma, who was casting his vote for the first time, did not let his disabilities hamper him from exercising his right to franchise.

Elderly Mohd Sharief, on crutches, was another voter in Poonch and expressed his enthusiasm after voting. "I was the first voter today in my area. I request everyone to come out and cast your vote," he said in a video message shared by the information and public relations wing of the district.

His appeal emphasises the collective responsibility to participate in the electoral process, which the Election Commission has been relentlessly seeking.

Sharma and Sharief were among the inspiring stories of the elderly and persons with disabilities voters shared by the Chief Electoral Officer (CEO) of J&K shared photos and a video on 'X' highlighting the participation of PwD's voters.

Even in the first phase of elections on September 18, both categories of voters were conspicuously in the lead.

Amid the lines of enthusiastic voters was a centenarian, who has been participating in India's festival of democracy without fail since the first Lok Sabha polls in 1951-52.

Prem Nath, who said he was almost 100 years old (99 years and 6 months), turned out to vote in Doda in the Jammu division.

Speaking to reporters after voting, Prem Nath, who said that he had retired from service in 1964, said he had always made it a habit to regularly cast his vote in all elections since India's first-ever parliamentary elections.

Noting he could not speak much, he stressed that casting votes was a responsibility in democracy and hence, he regularly came out to perform his duty, and appealed to all people to come out and exercise their franchise.

A 95-year-old man and 82-year-old woman, Bhag Dai also came out to vote in Doda, while there were many other examples of senior citizens, including those with age-related ailments or other disabilities who came out to vote, helped by their family members or volunteers at the polling booths.

A total of 26 seats in six districts - Poonch, Rajouri, and Reasi districts in the Jammu division and Ganderbal, Srinagar and Budgam districts of the Kashmir Valley - went to vote on Wednesday. The turnout was estimated at 54 per cent as of 5 p.m., as per the CEO's office.

Disclaimer: This post has been auto-published from an agency feed without any modifications to the text and has not been reviewed by an editor

Open in App

Related Stories

NationalNational Quantum Mission hits 1,000 km network milestone in less than 3 years; Jitendra Singh lauds indigenous breakthrough

Other SportsIPL 2026: Injury-free Katik Tyagi ready to take 'responsibility' for KKR

BusinessGujarat: GIFT City fund ecosystem expands sharply as commitments surge to $32.13 bn​

NationalMotihari tragedy: Tej Pratap Yadav attacks Nitish Kumar over liquor ban​

NationalTN polls: Stalin to launch fourth phase of campaign from Thanjavur on Friday

Health Realted Stories

HealthJharkhand HC seeks detailed probe report on HIV-infected blood transfusion in Chaibasa

HealthTejashwi Yadav targets Health Minister Mangal Pandey over viral Gaya hospital video

Health‘Poshan Pakhwada 2026’ to focus on maximising brain development in 1st 6 years of life

HealthTurmeric Milk Benefits: Know When to Drink It for Best Results

HealthWhat Is Second-Hand Stress? How Others’ Anxiety Can Affect Your Mental Health