India election 2024: What next after voting ends?

India election 2024: What next after voting ends?
Dibakar Das, 63, looks through the window of a painted wall featuring the name of a candidate and the party symbol of the All India Trinamool Congress, a regional political party, for the ongoing general election, on Ghoramara Island in the Sundarbans, West Bengal, India, April 13, 2024. (Reuters)
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Updated 30 May 2024
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India election 2024: What next after voting ends?

India election 2024: What next after voting ends?
  • Winners of India’s April 19-June 1 general election expected to form new government after votes counted on June 4
  • Analysts largely expect PM Narendra Modi to win third straight term as predicted by opinion polls before voting began

NEW DELHI: The winners of India’s April 19-June 1 general election are expected to form a new government by the middle of June after votes are counted on June 4. Analysts largely expect Prime Minister Narendra Modi to win a third straight term, as predicted by opinion polls before voting began.
Here is a look how votes, opens new tab are counted and what happens after that.
VOTE COUNTING
Vote counting is decentralized and done simultaneously at counting stations in each of the 543 constituencies around the country.
Counting begins at 8 am (0000 GMT) on June 4 with the tallying of postal ballots that only select groups can use, including people with disabilities, or those involved in essential services including security forces and some government officials.
After paper ballots, votes recorded in the Electronic Voting Machines (EVM) are counted, which India has used since 2000, moving away from paper ballots for national and state elections.
CRITICISM OF THE PROCESS
Along with the electronic record of each vote cast through the EVM, a corresponding paper slip is also produced, which is visible to the voter, and then stored in a sealed box.
The poll watchdog, the Election Commission of India (ECI), counts and verifies these paper slips against electronic votes at five randomly selected polling stations — drawn by lots — in different segments of each constituency.
While critics and some members of civil society, including some political parties, want verification to be done at more booths to increase transparency, the Supreme Court has declined to order any change in the vote-counting process.
The ECI has dismissed allegations that EVMs can be tampered, calling them foolproof.
FORMING THE GOVERNMENT
Results are announced for each constituency as soon as counting is completed. India follows the first-past-the-post system, under which a candidate with the highest number of votes wins, regardless of garnering a majority or not.
Result trends generally become clear by the afternoon of counting day and are flashed on television news networks. The official count from the ECI can come hours later.
After the ECI announces the results for all 543 seats, the president invites the leader of the party, or an alliance, which has more than half the seats to form the government.
The party or coalition with 272 or more seats then chooses a prime minister to lead the government.
In the 2019 elections, Modi’s Hindu-nationalist Bharatiya Janata Party won 303 seats and its National Democratic Alliance partners secured about 50 more. Meanwhile, the main opposition Congress won just 52 seats, with another 91 seats going to its allies.
If no political party or alliance gets a simple majority, leading to what is called a “hung house,” the president asks the party with the largest number of seats to form a government, and prove a majority on the floor of the house later.
A new Lok Sabha, the lower house of parliament, has to be in place before its current term ends on June 16.
WILL MODI WIN?
Opinion polls conducted before voting began on April 19 projected an easy victory for Modi for a rare third consecutive term, but a lower voter turnout, and a more unified opposition compared to 2019 have emerged as surprise challenges for him. Most analysts however say he is still likely to win.


EU lawmakers approve new $38 billion loan for Ukraine

EU lawmakers approve new $38 billion loan for Ukraine
Updated 12 sec ago
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EU lawmakers approve new $38 billion loan for Ukraine

EU lawmakers approve new $38 billion loan for Ukraine
  • Kyiv is desperate for funds as it seeks to prop up its economy, equip its military and keep its electricity grid functioning this winter
  • The EU loan is part of a bigger $50 billion initiative agreed by G7 powers in June
STRASBOURG, France: The European Parliament on Tuesday voted to hand war-torn Ukraine a loan of up to $38 billion (35 billion euros) backed by profits from frozen Russian assets.
Kyiv is desperate for funds as it seeks to prop up its economy, equip its military and keep its electricity grid functioning this winter after intense bombardments by Moscow’s forces.
The European Union loan — which was approved by an overwhelming majority of lawmakers — is part of a bigger $50 billion initiative agreed by G7 powers in June.
The EU is the first of the G7 powers to announce how much it is putting forward as its share of the plan and is still waiting for the United States and others to do their part.
EU justice commissioner Didier Reynders said other G7 countries are expected to unveil their contributions at a Washington meeting on Friday.
EU officials say the size of the bloc’s loan was up to 35 billion euros, but could decrease depending on how much other countries put forward.
The EU has frozen roughly $235 billion of Russian central bank funds since the Kremlin launched its invasion of Ukraine in 2022, the vast bulk of immobilized Russian assets worldwide.
About 90 percent of the funds in the EU are held by international deposit organization Euroclear, based in Belgium.
The G7 plan seeks to leverage interest earned on the assets to get more funds to Ukraine and will replace an existing EU scheme that funneled $1.7 billion to Kyiv in July.
There has been a delay in implementing the G7 loan as the United States had sought guarantees from the EU that the Russian assets would remain frozen.
Currently, EU members have to agree every six months to extend the asset freeze.
Hungary rejected a proposal to extend that period to 36 months, arguing it wants to wait until after the US presidential election in November.
The latest EU loan comes on top of roughly 120 billion euros of support that officials say the EU and its member states have provided to Kyiv since Russia’s invasion.

Myanmar rescuers find 8 more bodies after boat sinks

Myanmar rescuers find 8 more bodies after boat sinks
Updated 26 min 17 sec ago
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Myanmar rescuers find 8 more bodies after boat sinks

Myanmar rescuers find 8 more bodies after boat sinks
  • The boat had been carrying mostly students returning to southern Myeik city after a two-week break when it went down on Sunday

YANGON: Myanmar rescuers recovered eight more bodies, including three children, on Tuesday after an overloaded boat carrying around 90 people sank off the country’s southern coast, a local resident told AFP.
The boat had been carrying mostly students returning to southern Myeik city after a two-week break when it went down on Sunday.
Eleven bodies had been recovered as of Monday.
Rescuers found “eight more dead bodies today, including three children,” a resident of Kyauk Kar village, where the boat had set out, told AFP on Tuesday.
The five others were students aged between 18 and 20, he said, asking for anonymity to talk to the press.
Local media reported around 60 people had been rescued and eight were still missing.
Boat accidents are common in Myanmar, a country with rudimentary transport and weakly enforced safety regulations.
Vessels ferrying people along the coastline and rivers are often dangerously overcrowded, and accidents can have staggering death tolls. It can also take several days for all bodies to be retrieved.


Singapore blocks foreign-linked websites, warns against ‘hostile’ disinformation

Singapore blocks foreign-linked websites, warns against ‘hostile’ disinformation
Updated 33 min 39 sec ago
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Singapore blocks foreign-linked websites, warns against ‘hostile’ disinformation

Singapore blocks foreign-linked websites, warns against ‘hostile’ disinformation
  • The move comes as Singapore prepares for elections to be held before November next year
  • Two of the websites use domain names closely related or similar to legitimate Singapore-linked websites

SINGAPORE: Singapore on Tuesday blocked access to 10 websites linked to foreign actors which the government said could be used to mount “hostile” disinformation campaigns against the city-state.
The move comes as Singapore prepares for elections to be held before November next year.
“These 10 inauthentic websites have been observed to masquerade as Singapore websites by spoofing or using terms associated with Singapore in their domain name and incorporating familiar local features and visuals,” the Ministry of Home Affairs (MHA) said in a statement.
“They also carried content on Singapore, some of which were generated by artificial intelligence. These are common tactics used by malicious foreign actors: build websites which can attract a local following, that may subsequently be used as platforms to mount HICs,” it said, referring to hostile information campaigns.
Two of the websites use domain names closely related or similar to legitimate Singapore-linked websites.
They carried content “that may mislead their audience into thinking that the content is reflective of official positions or local sentiments,” MHA said.
Seven of the websites utilize the word “Singapore” or associated terms in their domain name and publish content related to the country.
The 10th presents itself as a Singapore news website, carrying mostly articles that we “were likely to have been written” using AI tools.
“These 10 inauthentic websites could potentially be used by foreign actors to mount HICs against Singapore, and it is in the public interest to issue directions... to disable access to them for users in Singapore,” MHA said.


Over 250 women in talks with Harrods over Al-Fayed claims

Over 250 women in talks with Harrods over Al-Fayed claims
Updated 34 min 19 sec ago
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Over 250 women in talks with Harrods over Al-Fayed claims

Over 250 women in talks with Harrods over Al-Fayed claims
  • The disclosure came as the daughter of former England footballer Paul Gascoigne said she was assaulted by the late Egyptian billionaire
  • Al-Fayed has been accused of raping and sexually harassing scores of women, earning comparisons with high-profile sex offenders

LONDON: Upmarket London department store Harrods on Tuesday said it was in discussions with more than 250 women to settle claims of sexual misconduct by former owner Mohamed Al-Fayed.
The disclosure came as the daughter of former England footballer Paul Gascoigne said she was assaulted by the late Egyptian billionaire when she worked at the store as a teenager but was threatened about speaking out.
Fayed has been accused of raping and sexually harassing scores of women, earning comparisons with high-profile sex offenders such as the Hollywood producer Harvey Weinstein and US financier Jeffrey Epstein.
The slew of allegations came to light in a BBC documentary aired last month.
Harrods, which is under new ownership, said in a statement: “Since 2023, Harrods settled a number of claims with women who alleged historic sexual misconduct by Fayed.
“Since the airing of the documentary, so far there are over 250+ individuals who are now in the Harrods process to settle claims directly with the business.”
Fayed, who died last year aged 94, was one of Britain’s most well-known businessmen. His son Dodi was killed in a 1997 Paris car crash alongside Princess Diana, the former wife of King Charles III.
Claims since that he was also a serial sexual predator have prompted police to re-examine their files for formal complaints against the tycoon, and led to growing numbers of women initiate formal legal action.
Last weekend, the former captain of Fulham Ladies football team, where Fayed was chairman between 1997 and 2013, said he assaulted her at his Harrods office.
On Tuesday, Bianca Gascoigne told Sky News that she joined Harrods as a teenager and Fayed initially portrayed himself as a kindly figure, as her father battled addiction in the public eye.
“I literally felt quite safe in his presence early doors,” she told the broadcaster.
But she said she was left “gobsmacked” and “shell-shocked” when Fayed turned up unannounced at a Harrods apartment where she was staying, and sexually assaulted her.
Gascoigne, 37, said she did not speak out at the time because Fayed told her she would lose her job if she did. “I just got really scared,” she added.


India bringing in a new law to curb the menace of hoax bomb threat calls disrupting airlines flying

India bringing in a new law to curb the menace of hoax bomb threat calls disrupting airlines flying
Updated 57 min 38 sec ago
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India bringing in a new law to curb the menace of hoax bomb threat calls disrupting airlines flying

India bringing in a new law to curb the menace of hoax bomb threat calls disrupting airlines flying
  • The Indian government is working on a new law to punish those spreading the menace of hoax bomb threat calls

NEW DELHI: The Indian government plans a new law to punish those making hoax bomb threats against flights, which disrupt the schedules of airlines and cause massive inconvenience to thousands of passengers.
In less than two weeks, more than 120 flights operated by Indian carriers have received bomb threats, the Press Trust of India news agency reported.
Civil Aviation Minister K Rammohan said on Monday that the government is planning to introduce legislation that would put offenders on a no-fly list and amend the 1982 Civil Aviation Act so that they can be arrested and investigated without a court order.
On Tuesday, IndiGo, a private Indian airline, said nine of its flights destined for Jeddah and Dammam in Saudi Arabia and some flights from Turkiye had received such hoax calls. The flights were diverted to the nearest airports for security checks.
“We worked closely with the relevant authorities and followed standard operating procedures,” the airline said in a statement.
The hoaxers have largely gone untraced so far. The Mumbai police said they detained a 17-year-old boy from eastern Chhattisgarh state on Wednesday for allegedly posting bomb threat messages on the social media of various airlines.
Police officer Maneesh Kalwaniya said the boy’s motive was to implicate another person involved in a business dispute with him.
The Press Trust of India said 30 domestic and international flights operated by Indian airlines, including IndiGo, Vistara, and Air India, received bomb threats on Monday night alone.
“Even though bomb threats are hoaxes, things cannot be taken non-seriously,” Rammohan said.