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Friday, February 6, 2015

Info Post
Polling stations have opened in Delhi for state elections billed as the first real test of Indian Prime Minister Narendra Modi’s popularity.


Mr Modi’s Bharatiya Janata Party (BJP) has fielded former policewoman Kiran Bedi as its pick for chief minister.


But polls suggest she is likely to lose to Arvind Kejriwal, an anti-corruption activist who heads his own party.
Mr Modi won convincingly in last summer’s general election, and has ridden a wave of popularity ever since.
Over 13 million people are eligible to vote at 12,000 polling centres in the state assembly elections.
Security is tight and more than 55,000 police and paramilitary have been deployed.


Official results for the 70-member state assembly are due on Tuesday.


In recent months, the BJP won a string of state assembly elections.
But correspondents say a tough fight awaits them in Delhi, where several surveys have put Mr Kejriwal’s Aam Aadmi Party (AAP) ahead of the others.


The Congress party, which ran the Indian capital for 15 years until 2013, is predicted to come a distant third.
Delhi has been without a government since Mr Kejriwal, the former chief minister, resigned last February, angered that his anti-corruption bill was blocked.

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