Polls: Cash, liquor seizures go through the roof in 2017


New Delhi, Feb 27 (PTI): The seizure of suspected cash, liquor and drugs during the Assembly elections in Uttar Pradesh, Uttarakhand, Goa and Punjab this year has witnessed a huge jump from last polls. Uttar Pradesh has seen record seizures of Rs 115.70 crore cash, 20.29 lakh barrels of liquor worth Rs 57.69 crore, and narcotics weighing 2,725 kg worth Rs 7.91 crore, as per the progressive data recorded till yesterday of seizures made by the Election Commission-appointed surveillance teams.

The comparative figures for the detection and seizure of these illegal inducements in UP during the 2012 Assembly polls stood at Rs 36.29 crore cash and over 3,073 litres of liquor worth Rs 6.61 lakh. A similar massive increase in seizures has also been noticed in Uttarakhand, where single-phase polls ended early this month, as Rs 3.40 crore suspected cash, 1.01 lakh litres liquor worth Rs 3.10 crore and over 81 kg of drugs worth Rs 37.88 lakh have been seized by these teams till now. Polling in one seat (Karnprayag) of the state has been postponed as a candidate had died.

The comparative figures for seizures in the hill state during 2012 stood at Rs 1.30 crore cash, 15,151 litres of liquor worth Rs 15.15 lakh among others. In Punjab, where the polls have ended now, the cash seizures this time stood at Rs 58.02 crore as compared to Rs 11.51 crore last elections, 12.43 lakh litres of liquor worth Rs 13.36 crore as compared to over 3,2978 litres worth Rs 2.59 crore and 2,598 kg drugs worth Rs 18.26 crore as compared to 53 kg worth Rs 54 crore during the 2012 Assembly polls.

Goa too has witnessed a similar trend with Rs 2.24 crore suspected cash being seized at the end of one-phase polls on February 4, over 76,000 litres liquor worth Rs 1.07 crore. The cash seizure in the beach state during last polls was a mere Rs 60 lakh while the drugs and liquor seizure was very less. The comparative figures of these seizures for Manipur, where polls will be held next month, could not be obtained.

"It looks like demonetisation has not affected those who deal in black money and other illegal inducements used to lure the voters before and during the polls season. "The surveillance teams are, however, on their toes to thwart these efforts as much as possible," a senior Income Tax department official, involved in these operations, said. The counting of votes for all the five states will take place on March 11.

  

Top Stories

Comment on this article

  • Mark Dcruz, Mangalore

    Sun, Feb 26 2017

    Now these B j pee will blame congress,

    DisAgree [4] Agree [9] Reply Report Abuse

  • HENRY MISQUITH, Suratkal/ M'lore/Bahrain

    Sun, Feb 26 2017

    Desh Badal raha hai.

    Vote keliye Note
    Aur Dil ko diya Chot..

    DisAgree Agree [4] Reply Report Abuse

  • JJ, Mangalore

    Sun, Feb 26 2017

    Demonitisation is a complete failure, flop and a scam. Whoever thought and decided on this policy should be jailed for life. The ripple effects of this MAD policy is still affecting millions in the rural and village areas. Now there is no one in the government including Modi or Jaitley to address this issue. It is forgotten and laid to rest. What a JOKE....

    DisAgree [2] Agree [5] Reply Report Abuse


Leave a Comment

Title: Polls: Cash, liquor seizures go through the roof in 2017



You have 2000 characters left.

Disclaimer:

Please write your correct name and email address. Kindly do not post any personal, abusive, defamatory, infringing, obscene, indecent, discriminatory or unlawful or similar comments. Daijiworld.com will not be responsible for any defamatory message posted under this article.

Please note that sending false messages to insult, defame, intimidate, mislead or deceive people or to intentionally cause public disorder is punishable under law. It is obligatory on Daijiworld to provide the IP address and other details of senders of such comments, to the authority concerned upon request.

Hence, sending offensive comments using daijiworld will be purely at your own risk, and in no way will Daijiworld.com be held responsible.