first
phase, the coalition said. At Ompura in Badgam constituency, the team
of the coalition saw Special Operations Groups (SOG) personnel abusing
a 70-year-old voter, Khaliq Bhat, for abstaining from voting. Later,
Bhat told the team that he was saved greater trouble because the team
had appeared on the scene.
In
the village of Soibug, located in the same constituency between two
army camps, villagers complained that the army had been pressuring
them to go out and vote.
In
Sunoor Kalipora in Beerwah constituency, they came face to face with
Rashtriya Rifles personnel herding people in a bus and taking them to
the polling booth. When the coalition team asked the commander of the
security personnel, who was following the bus in a tractor, where the
people were being taken to, he feigned ignorance, saying he did not
know who was taking the villagers or where.
In
Zaindar Mohalla in Habakadal constituency, the team came across a big
crowd of angry and outraged women. "They said some Special Task
Force [STF] men had entered at least a dozen homes, destroyed property
and beaten up people for having boycotted elections,” the team's
second interim report said.
In
Kursoo Rajbagh Bund in Amirakadal constituency, Jammu and Kashmir
police personnel were knocking at doors asking people to come out and
vote. They had removed their badges of identity.
When
the team confronted them, “they excused themselves on the pretext
that they were only telling people that the latter were free and safe
to come out of their houses and that the earlier encounter with
militants was over. This was clearly not the case as per the
complaints by the people in the locality.”
The
findings of the coalition came out with an interim report Thursday,
September 26. IslamOnline has a copy of the report.
Besides
official coercion, the team also found evidence of other electoral
malpractices. At Ganderpora they found seven burqa-clad (veiled)
women, who had no identification papers, casting their votes. The
National Conference polling agent said they were from some other
locality.
In
Bhagwanpura and Ghassi Mohalla, the team also saw burqa-clad women
voting even without identity papers. Such bogus mobile voters always
came in burqa.
In
some places they found minors as young as 12 voting. It Aripanthan in
Beerwah constituency, a class VI student, only 12-years old, had her
name in electoral rolls and carried a voter card. She not only cast
her vote but claimed her other classmates were doing the same.