A day ahead of the Lok Sabha poll vote count, opposition parties Wednesday slammed the Election Commission for rejecting their demand to tweak the counting of voter-verified paper audit trail (VVPAT) slips with the Congress calling it "Enfeebled Commission" while BJP chief Amit Shah termed their plea as unconstitutional.
As the row over the Electronic Voting Machines(EVM) persisted and opposition workers at several places kept a tight vigil at strongrooms storing them, the EC decided to follow the established procedure of counting VVPAT slips for the mandatory five polling stations per assembly segment of each parliamentary constituency only at the end of the entire counting process.
The Opposition approached the EC on Tuesday to demand that the five random VVPATs in each Assembly segment should instead be counted first so that if there is a problem or a mismatch, the entire slips can be counted from the beginning itself.
Though the EC made it clear to the 22 opposition parties on Tuesday that the old protocol for counting the paper slips will continue, its top officials met Wednesday and decided against making any last-minute changes to the way they are to be tallied.
Counting of votes will be taken up on Thursday amid exit poll predictions that the BJP-led NDA will retain power.
CPI(M) general secretary Sitaram Yechury said the EC decision went against the "spirit" of a Supreme Court order.
"If the process has been so long drawn for the sake of integrity of the electoral process, why is (the) EC not adhering to the basic principle of testing the sample first?" the Left leader asked.
Congress spokesperson Abhishek Singhvi asked whether the EC has made the EVMs "electronic victory machines" for the BJP and the model code of conduct as "Modi's Campaign Code", alleging it has succumbed to the pressures of Prime Minister Narendra Modi and BJP chief Amit Shah.
"It is a black day for democracy and it is very sad and unfortunate for an institution like the Election Commission," he told reporters.
The Telugu Desam Party(TDP) termed the EC decision as "a dark day for Indian democracy".
"A genuine and fair demand for transparency is chucked out of the window without a reason.
"A dark day for Indian democracy!"TDP general secretary Nara Lokesh said in a tweet,
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