For representational purposes (File Photo | PTI) 
India

27 per cent Congress candidates, 19 per cent BJP candidates in first phase face serious criminal charges: ADR

The two national parties have fielded 83 candidates each for the first phase of the election.

From our online archive

NEW DELHI: Twenty-seven per cent of the Congress candidates and 19 per cent of the BJP candidates fielded for the first phase of Lok Sabha election, to be held on Thursday, have serious criminal charges registered against them, according to an analysis by ADR India, an advocacy group.

The two national parties have fielded 83 candidates each for the first phase of the election.

The Communist Party of India (Marxist) has fielded eight candidates in the first phase, of which three, which comes to around nearly 38 per cent, have serious criminal charges registered against them, said a statement by Association of Democratic Reforms.

The candidates have made self-declaration about their pending serious criminal charges.

Six candidates of the Nationalist Congress Party are in the fray, of which two, nearly 33 per cent, have serious criminal charges registered against them.

Of the five candidates fielded by Trinamool Congress, none face criminal charges.

The Bahujan Samaj Party has fielded 32 candidates in the first phase of the election. Nineteen per cent face serious criminal charges.

The Communist Party of India has fielded eight candidates, of which only one has serious criminal charge registered.

Ninety-one Lok Sabha seats across 20 states and Union Territories will go to polls on Thursday.

CJP issues 7-day ultimatum; threatens nationwide protests if Education Minister Pradhan does not resign

Actor Salim Kumar, who made Malayalees laugh and later moved us to tears, passes away at 57

Domestic LPG price raised by Rs 29 per cylinder amid continued pressure on fuel retailers: Report

NTA denies claims of leak or sale of NEET UG re-exam paper, warns of strict action against rumour mongers

Iran football team departs for Mexico training base amid reported US visa issues for staff

SCROLL FOR NEXT