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Gujarat Election 2022: AAP tops list of candidates with criminal cases, followed by Congress

Gujarat Election 2022: The criminal case records are only for the first phase of assembly polls. After AAP, the Congress has fielded 35 per cent of its candidates with criminal cases.

Edited By: Vani Mehrotra @vani_mehrotra New Delhi Updated on: November 24, 2022 17:11 IST
Gujarat Election 2022,
Image Source : PTI 21% candidates in first phase of Gujarat polls facing criminal cases; AAP tops list, followed by Cong, BJP: Report

Gujarat Election 2022: A total of 167 candidates, out of the 788 contesting the 89 seats in the first phase of the Gujarat Assembly election, have criminal cases against them, with 100 of them facing serious charges like murder and rape, a report by the Association for Democratic Reforms (ADR) said on Thursday.

With this, 21 per cent of the candidates in the fray have criminal cases against them, while 13 per cent are facing serious charges.

The Aam Aadmi Party (AAP), which is contesting 88 seats out of the total 89, tops this list among major political parties in the fray with 36 per cent of its candidates having criminal cases. Thirty per cent of its candidates are facing serious cases such as murder, rape, assault, kidnapping, among others, the ADR said in its report. 

The number of candidates having criminal cases fielded by the AAP is 32.

The Arvind Kejriwal-led party is followed by the Congress, which has fielded 35 per cent of its candidates with criminal cases. 

Twenty per cent of such candidates are facing serious cases. The grand old party is contesting all 89 seats in the first phase and the number of candidates with criminal cases fielded by it is 31, the report said.

The ruling BJP, which is also contesting all seats in the first phase of the election, has fielded 14 candidates with criminal records. Percentage-wise, such candidates account for 16 per cent of its total number and 12 per cent are facing serious charges, the ADR said in its report.

The Bharatiya Tribal Party (BTP), which is contesting 14 seats in the first phase, has four candidates (29 per cent) with declared criminal cases. A total seven per cent of its candidates have serious criminal cases this time.

In the 2017 Assembly elections, 15 per cent of candidates contesting in the first phase had criminal cases against them, the report said, adding that eight per cent of the candidates then had serious criminal cases.

Some candidates with serious criminal cases are Janak Talaviya (BJP) and Vasant Patel (Congress), the report said.

Of the 167 candidates from the first phase, 100 have declared serious cases against them in their affidavit submitted to the Election Commission. These include nine cases of crime against women, three cases of murder and 12 cases of attempt to murder. In 2017, there were 78 such candidates in the fray in the first phase, it added.

Some candidates with serious criminal cases are Janak Talaviya (BJP), Vasant Patel (Congress), Amardas Desani (independent). 

Other candidates with criminal record include Parshottam Solanki of the BJP, Ganiben Thakor and Jignesh Mevani of the Congress, Gopal Italia and Alpesh Katheriya of the AAP.

In the 2017 Assembly elections, Congress, BJP and BTP had fielded 36, 25 and 67 per cent candidates with criminal cases, respectively, in the first phase.

The ADR has also tagged 25 out of the total 89 constituencies in the first phase as "red alert" seats, or those where three or more candidates have declared criminal cases.

As per the Election Commission's directions in compliance with the Supreme Court order dated September 25, 2018, it is mandatory for all political parties to upload on its website the information on pending criminal cases and reasons for the selection of such candidates.

The information is also required to be published in a local and a national daily and uploaded on official social media platforms.

"These directions are not followed properly... We have noticed that information is published in local newspapers in Gujarati, but the declarations are in English. Also, the font size of such information should be 12, but they have published details in very small font size," said Anil Verma, head of the ADR, at a press conference addressed via video link.

In its note, the report observed that the directions of the Supreme Court have "no effect on the political parties in the selection of candidates in the first phase of the election as they have again followed their old practice of giving tickets to around 21 per cent candidates with criminal cases".

"The SC's direction on the selection of candidates (with no criminal background) has not made much difference. This is not for Gujarat alone. In the past elections also the situation was the same," Verma told reporters.

He said that the reasons given by the political parties to the Election Commission as to why they select such candidates are "hilarious".

"For example, if a candidate is booked in a murder case, the party said that he is a good social worker and we did not find any other suitable candidate," he said.

"In many states we have observed that the reasons mentioned by parties for the selection of such candidates are exactly the same," Verma added.

(With inputs from PTI)

Also Read | Gujarat elections: Ruling BJP faces tough task at Morbi seat after tragic bridge collapse incident

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