Detailed Result

Total Page:16

File Type:pdf, Size:1020Kb

Detailed Result DETAILED RESULT AC NO. & Name - 1 Rajmahal SL NO. Names of the Contesting Candidates Sex Age Category Party Votes from EVM Postal Votes Total Votes 1 ARUN MANDAL M 55 GEN BJP 51277 0 51277 2 MD. TAJUDDIN M 36 GEN JMM 40874 0 40874 3 THOMAS HANSDA M 58 ST INC 14782 0 14782 4 NAZRUL ISLAM M 48 GEN AITC 7017 0 7017 5 MD. MOINUDDIN SHEKH M 43 GEN CPM 6065 0 6065 6 DHRUV BHAGAT M 58 GEN LJP 3811 0 3811 7 BINOD KUMAR YADAV M 31 GEN IND 3224 0 3224 8 MUKHTAR HUSSAIN M 48 GEN RSP 2568 0 2568 9 VIBHASH KUMAR SHAH M 29 GEN AJSU 2030 0 2030 10 IDRISH M 40 GEN BSP 1800 0 1800 11 ABHIMANYU MANDAL M 38 GEN SHS 1434 0 1434 12 DHARMENDRA KUMAR SINGH M 28 GEN IND 1236 0 1236 Grand Total : 136118 0 136118 Office of the Chief Electoral Officer, Jharkhand 1 General Election to Jharkhand Legislative Assembly 2009 DETAILED RESULT AC NO. & Name - 2 Borio-(ST) SL NO. Names of the Contesting Candidates Sex Age Category Party Votes from EVM Postal Votes Total Votes 1 LOBIN HEMBRAM M 54 ST JMM 37586 0 37586 2 TALA MARANDI M 46 ST BJP 28546 0 28546 3 SURYA NRAYAN HANSDA M 30 ST JVM 25835 0 25835 4 RAMA PAHARIA M 34 ST IND 3723 0 3723 5 SUNITA HANSDA F 28 ST IND 3114 0 3114 6 PRABHAWATI BASKEY F 36 ST CPM 3111 0 3111 7 RAMKRISHNA SOREN M 38 ST IND 2109 0 2109 8 PAULUS MURMU M 32 ST AJSU 1944 0 1944 9 RODRICK HEMBROM M 43 ST IND 1337 0 1337 10 MAHESH MALTO M 41 ST RSP 1276 0 1276 11 KHALIFA KISKU M 59 ST IND 1212 0 1212 12 RAPAZ CHANDA KISKU M 65 ST IND 1140 0 1140 13 RAYMOND MURMU M 31 ST BSP 1069 0 1069 14 MANDAKINI MURMU F 44 ST LJP 995 0 995 15 MANOJ KUMAR GOND M 32 ST IND 976 0 976 Grand Total : 113973 0 113973 Office of the Chief Electoral Officer, Jharkhand 2 General Election to Jharkhand Legislative Assembly 2009 DETAILED RESULT AC NO. & Name - 3 Barhait-(ST) SL NO. Names of the Contesting Candidates Sex Age Category Party Votes from EVM Postal Votes Total Votes 1 HEMLAL MURMU M 54 ST JMM 40621 0 40621 2 VIJAY HANSDAK M 28 ST IND 20303 0 20303 3 SIMON MALTO M 38 ST IND 14163 0 14163 4 MANOJ MURMU M 36 ST BJP 9490 0 9490 5 THOMAS SOREN M 46 ST IND 5278 0 5278 6 MICHAEL MARANDI M 32 ST JKP 3109 0 3109 7 CHOTO HANSDA M 46 ST RJD 2224 0 2224 8 PIYUS SOREN M 48 ST INC 2084 0 2084 9 TONOL KISKU M 32 ST IND 1071 0 1071 10 BEENA PANI HANSDA F 28 ST AITC 847 0 847 11 SAMSON TUDU M 49 ST SAP 771 0 771 12 MERI SALOMI MURMU ALIAS F 34 ST SHS 763 0 763 SUSHILA MOHALIN 13 JETHA HANSDA M 41 ST BSP 724 0 724 Grand Total : 101448 0 101448 Office of the Chief Electoral Officer, Jharkhand 3 General Election to Jharkhand Legislative Assembly 2009 DETAILED RESULT AC NO. & Name - 4 Litipara-(ST) SL NO. Names of the Contesting Candidates Sex Age Category Party Votes from EVM Postal Votes Total Votes 1 SIMON MARANDI M 61 ST JMM 29872 3 29875 2 ANIL MURMU M 41 ST INC 24472 6 24478 3 THAKUR HANSDA M 48 ST BJP 18835 7 18842 4 DANIEL KISKU M 35 ST IND 4463 0 4463 5 JAMES MURMU M 37 ST AITC 3911 0 3911 6 JANTU SOREN M 31 ST RSP 2593 0 2593 7 MANOJ MARANDI M 37 ST IND 2505 0 2505 8 SATYA SHIKSHANAND MURMU M 48 ST RJD 1996 0 1996 9 HILARIYUS MURMU M 35 ST BSP 1773 0 1773 10 GANDE PAHARIYA M 51 ST IND 1311 0 1311 11 THAKUR HANSDA M 68 ST IND 893 0 893 12 CHARAN MURMU M 35 ST SHS 795 0 795 13 GUPIN HEMBROM M 27 ST AJSUP 784 0 784 14 BHIM HEMBROM M 63 ST SAP 771 0 771 Grand Total : 94974 16 94990 Office of the Chief Electoral Officer, Jharkhand 4 General Election to Jharkhand Legislative Assembly 2009 DETAILED RESULT AC NO. & Name - 5 Pakur SL NO. Names of the Contesting Candidates Sex Age Category Party Votes from EVM Postal Votes Total Votes 1 AQUIL AKHTAR M 44 GEN JMM 62223 23 62246 2 ALAMGIR ALAM M 56 GEN INC 56509 61 56570 3 SANJEEV KUMAR M 35 GEN BJP 29723 25 29748 4 MD. SABIRUDDIN M 52 GEN CPM 5549 1 5550 5 BENI PRASAD GUPTA M 53 GEN IND 3851 3 3854 6 SHIV CHARAN HANSDA M 52 ST IND 3557 0 3557 7 MD. MUSLIM HUSSAIN M 65 GEN RJD 1917 2 1919 8 MD. ASRAFUL SHEIKH M 27 GEN AITC 1292 0 1292 9 MOHAN MURMU M 33 ST BSA 1162 0 1162 10 MANJULA HANSDA F 33 ST IND 992 0 992 11 ANAND TURI M 59 SC IND 973 0 973 12 KIRAN LAL KAPRI M 31 GEN JKP(N) 688 0 688 13 MD. NASIMUJJAMA M 41 GEN SAP 597 0 597 Grand Total : 169033 115 169148 Office of the Chief Electoral Officer, Jharkhand 5 General Election to Jharkhand Legislative Assembly 2009 DETAILED RESULT AC NO. & Name - 6 Maheshpur-(ST) SL NO. Names of the Contesting Candidates Sex Age Category Party Votes from EVM Postal Votes Total Votes 1 MISTRI SOREN M 40 ST JVM 50734 12 50746 2 DEVIDHAN TUDU M 43 ST BJP 28764 8 28772 3 DURGA MARANDI M 47 ST AITC 15836 4 15840 4 GOPIN SOREN M 46 ST CPM 3616 0 3616 5 DAUD MARANDI M 25 ST IND 2625 0 2625 6 STEFAN MARANDI M 36 ST IND 1879 0 1879 7 AMELIYA HANSDA F 30 ST RSP 1807 0 1807 8 SAIMON MURMU M 32 ST JKP 1390 0 1390 9 KANDANA HEMBROM M 65 ST IND 1344 0 1344 10 SUBASTEN KISKU M 34 ST IND 1222 0 1222 11 SAMSON HANSDA M 35 ST IND 1214 0 1214 12 PRAMODINI HEMBROM F 50 ST IND 1193 0 1193 13 ANTHONI UTPAL MARANDI M 36 ST BSP 1183 0 1183 14 MEKAEL HEMBROM M 45 ST IND 698 0 698 Grand Total : 113505 24 113529 Office of the Chief Electoral Officer, Jharkhand 6 General Election to Jharkhand Legislative Assembly 2009 DETAILED RESULT AC NO. & Name - 7 Shikaripara-(ST) SL NO. Names of the Contesting Candidates Sex Age Category Party Votes from EVM Postal Votes Total Votes 1 NALIN SOREN M 61 ST JMM 30414 60 30474 2 PARITOSH SOREN M 36 ST JVM 29422 49 29471 3 RAJA MARANDI M 49 ST JD(U) 28966 43 29009 4 MUNNI HANSDA F 30 ST AITC 4626 15 4641 5 DEVID MURMU M 63 ST RJD 3813 3 3816 6 PANKAJ KUMAR TUDU M 32 ST IND 2169 0 2169 7 HOPNA BASKI M 45 ST IND 2157 0 2157 8 PALTON HANSDAK M 37 ST CPI(ML)(L) 1556 0 1556 9 BHIM SOREN M 57 ST LTSD 1288 2 1290 10 HABIL MURMU M 30 ST RADP 1165 0 1165 11 BABULAL KISKU M 41 ST RSP 1050 2 1052 12 SITARAM MURMU M 32 ST BSP 868 0 868 Grand Total : 107494 174 107668 Office of the Chief Electoral Officer, Jharkhand 7 General Election to Jharkhand Legislative Assembly 2009 DETAILED RESULT AC NO. & Name - 8 Nala SL NO. Names of the Contesting Candidates Sex Age Category Party Votes from EVM Postal Votes Total Votes 1 SATYANAND JHA M 55 GEN BJP 38119 0 38119 2 RABINDRA NATH MAHATO M 50 GEN JMM 34171 0 34171 3 KANAI CHANDRA MALPAHARIA M 43 ST CPI 19014 0 19014 4 AMITA RAKSHIT F 32 GEN INC 10048 0 10048 5 PRAVEEN PRABHAKAR M 36 GEN AJSUP 2475 0 2475 6 GOUR CHANDRA YADAV M 49 GEN IND 2246 0 2246 7 MILAN KUMAR GHOSHOL M 35 GEN AITC 1837 0 1837 8 GUNADHAR MONDAL M 36 GEN IND 1350 0 1350 9 SHARAT KUMAR MANDAL M 43 GEN SP 1267 0 1267 10 UMANATH KOLE M 52 ST IND 1114 0 1114 11 MIHIR KUMAR DAS M 37 SC BSP 1047 0 1047 12 KAMDEB MOHLI M 52 ST SAP 966 0 966 13 BAUL MANDAL M 59 GEN IND 940 0 940 14 KUMAR VINOD M 39 GEN LTSD 934 0 934 15 JAGAT MANDAL M 31 GEN CPI(ML)(L) 889 0 889 16 KARTIK CHANDRA GORAI M 41 GEN IND 864 0 864 17 MANOJ KUMAR HEMBROM M 31 ST RSP 726 0 726 18 NURAMANI PRATIBHA HANSDAK F 52 ST IND 682 0 682 19 SUNIL KUMAR ROY M 46 GEN IND 654 0 654 20 RADHESHAYAM AGARWALA M 54 GEN IND 646 0 646 21 BARO SOREN M 60 ST IND 564 0 564 22 BASANT KUMAR MISHRA M 52 GEN IND 411 0 411 23 SAHADEO SOREN M 58 ST IND 264 0 264 24 SHEOLAL MURMU ALIAS- SHEO M 50 ST IND 250 0 250 SHANKAR LAL MURMU Grand Total : 121478 0 121478 Office of the Chief Electoral Officer, Jharkhand 8 General Election to Jharkhand Legislative Assembly 2009 DETAILED RESULT AC NO. & Name - 9 Jamtara SL NO. Names of the Contesting Candidates Sex Age Category Party Votes from EVM Postal Votes Total Votes 1 BISHNU PRASAD BHAIYA M 47 GEN JMM 62794 1 62795 2 FURKAN ANSARI M 61 GEN INC 49952 0 49952 3 BABY SARKAR F 40 GEN BJP 9228 0 9228 4 SARYU PD.
Recommended publications
  • Volume Xlv, No. 3 September, 1999 the Journal of Parliamentary Information
    VOLUME XLV, NO. 3 SEPTEMBER, 1999 THE JOURNAL OF PARLIAMENTARY INFORMATION VOL. XLV NO.3 SEPTEMBER 1999 CONTENTS PAGE EDITORIAL NOTE 281 SHORT NOTES The Thirteenth Lok Sabha; Another Commitment to Democratic Values -LARRDIS 285 The Election of the Speaker of the Thirteenth Lok Sabha -LARRDIS 291 The Election of the Deputy Speaker of the Thirteenth Lok Sabha -LARRDIS 299 Dr. (Smt.) Najma Heptulla-the First Woman President of the Inter-Parliamentary Union -LARRDIS 308 Parliamentary Committee System in Bangladesh -LARRDIS 317 Summary of the Report of the Ethics Committee, Andhra Pradesh Legislative Assembly on Code of Conduct for Legislators in and outside the Legislature 324 PARLIAMENTARY EVENTS AND ACTIVITIES Conferences and Symposia 334 Birth Anniversaries of National Leaders 336 Indian Parliamentary Delegations Going Abroad 337 Bureau of Parliamentary Studies and Training 337 PARLIAMENTARY AND CONSTITUTIONAL DEVELOPMENTS 339 SESSIONAl REVIEW State Legislatures 348 SUMMARIES OF BooKS Mahajan, Gurpreet, Identities and Rights-Aspects of Liberal Democracy in India 351 Khanna, S.K., Crisis of Indian Democracy 354 RECENT LITERATURE OF PARLIAMENTARY INTEREST 358 ApPENDICES I. Statement showing the work transacted during the Fourth Session of the Twelfth lok Sabha 372 II. Statement showing the work transacted during the One Hundred and Eighty-sixth Session of the Rajya Sabha 375 III. Statement showing the activities of the legislatures of the States and the Union territories during the period 1 April to 30 June 1999 380 IV. List of Bills passed by the Houses of Parliament and assented to by the President during the period 1 April to 30 June 1999 388 V.
    [Show full text]
  • Statistical Report After Every General
    Cabinet (Election) Department Near Gayatri Mandi, H.E.C., Sector-2 Dhurwa, Ranchi-834004 From the desk of Chief Electoral Officer It is customary to bring out a Statistical Report after every General Election setting out the data on the candidates and the votes polled by them besides information on electorate size and polling stations etc. The present Report presents the statistics pertaining to the General Election to Jharkhand Assembly Constituency 2014. It is hoped that the statistical data contained in this booklet will be useful to all those connected with, or having an interest in, electoral administration, and politics and for researchers. (P.K. Jajoria) Chief Electoral Officer CONTENTS Sl. No. Item Page No. 1 Schedule of General Election to Jharkhand Legislative Assembly 2014 2 Re-poll Details 3 District Election Officers 4 Assembly Constituency wise Returning Officers 5 Assembly Constituency wise Assistant Returning Officers 6 Highlights 7 List of Political Parties That Contested The General Election 2014 To Jharkhand Legislative Assembly 8 Number, Name and Type of Constituencies, No. of Candidates per Constituency, List of Winners with Party Affiliation 9 Nomination Filed, Rejected, Withdrawn And Candidates Contested 10 Number of Cases of Forfeiture of Deposits 11 Performance of Political Parties And Independents 12 Performance of Women Candidates 13 Assembly Constituency Wise Electors 14 Assembly Constituency wise details of Photo Electors, EPIC holders and percentages. 15 Assembly Constituency Wise Electors And Poll Percentage
    [Show full text]
  • Landmark Judgements on Election Law
    “No voter to be left behind” LANDMARK JUDGEMENTS ON ELECTION LAW (A Compilation of Important Judgements pronounced by the Supreme Court of India, High Courts and Election Commission of India) VOLUME - V Election Commission of India Nirvachan Sadan, Ashoka Road, New Delhi-110001 2 “No voter to be left behind” 3 “No voter to be left behind” 4 “No voter to be left behind” 5 “No voter to be left behind” 6 “No voter to be left behind” 7 “No voter to be left behind” S.No. Name of the Judgment Page No. 1 Dayanand Rayu Manderekar v. Chandrakant Uttam Chodankar 1 & Others [CA No. 3578 & 3579 of 2005], Supreme Court 2 Ashok Pandey v. Election Commission of India [CM (PIL) WP 7 No. 17772 of 2007], High Court of Allahabad Subramaniam Swamy v. Election Commission of India [CA No. 5803 of 2008], Supreme Court 3 Subramaniam Swamy v. Election Commission of India [CA 18 No. 5803 of 2008], Supreme Court 4 Deputy Commissioner v. State of Karnataka [Cr. Petition 40 Nos. 8070 to 8074 of 2010], High Court of Karnataka Election Commission of India v. Telangana Rastra Samithi and Another [CA No. 10244 of 2010], Supreme Court 5 Election Commission of India v. Telangana Rastra Samithi 79 and Another [CA No. 10244 of 2010], Supreme Court 6 Chandra Prakash Kaushik v. Election Commission of India & 99 Another [LPA. 522 of 2012], High Court of Delhi 7 Patty B. Janganathan v. Chief Election Commissioner & 111 Others [WP Nos. 8289 of 2011], High Court of Madras 8 Dheeraj Pratap Singh v.
    [Show full text]
  • CHINESE ROCKET LONG MARCH 5 (Science) the Shijian 20 Satellite
    CHINESE ROCKET LONG MARCH 5 (Science) China's biggest rocket, the Long March 5, returned to flight for the first time since a 2017 failure Friday (Dec. 27) in a dazzling nighttime launch for the Chinese space program. The Long March 5 Y3 rocket lifted off at 8:45 p.m. Beijing Time carrying the experimental Shijian 20 communications satellite into a geosynchronous orbit. The satellite, which weighs a reported 8 metric tons, is China's heaviest and most advanced satellite to date, according to state media reports. The successful launch is the first Long March 5 since a first-stage booster failure in 2017 destroyed the Shijian 18 satellite. The failure prompted redesigns in the rocket's first-stage engines, which led to a two-year gap between missions. The first Long March 5 rocket lifted off in 2016. The Long March 5 is an essential booster for China's space ambitions. The heavy-lift booster will be the one to launch China's space station modules into orbit, as well as a Mars lander in 2020 and the Chang'e 5 moon sample-return mission. China is also expected to use a version of the Long March 5, called the Long March 5B, to launch a new crewed spacecraft — the successor to its current Shenzhou crew capsule. The rocket stands 184 feet (56 meters) tall and weighs nearly 2 million lbs. (867,000 kilograms) at liftoff. It is capable of carrying payloads of up to 55,000 lbs. (25,000 kilograms) into low Earth orbit. It can haul up 31,000 lbs.
    [Show full text]
  • Asia Research Centre Working Paper 18
    Asia Research Centre Working Paper 18 Contrarian Lives: Christians and Contemporary Protest in Jharkhand Written by Dr. Sushil J. Aaron Sushil J. Aaron, an independent researcher based in New Delhi, was the 2004/05 Sir Ratan Tata Fellow at the Asia Research Centre, LSE. He did his Ph.D. at the Jawaharlal Nehru University and his previous publications include Christianity and Political Conflict in India (RCSS: Colombo, 2002) and Straddling Faultlines: India’s Foreign Policy in the Greater Middle East (CSH: New Delhi, 2003). E-mail: [email protected] The modern history of the Jharkhand region in India can be understood as a tale of incomplete pacification of ‘tribal’ communities by both the colonial and postcolonial regimes. Starting with the introduction of alien land tenure laws by the British, the increasing reach of inimical political and commercial interests, the tapping of huge mineral reserves as part of India’s development march have adversely affected adivasi communities through land alienation, displacement and declining access to common property resources. Adivasis have responded through issue-based people’s movements in various areas that oppose, for instance, reservoir dams, mining activity or forestry initiatives. Christians have historically played a leading role in the clamour for tribal autonomy even if they account for only four percent of the population. This paper attempts to chart what the intensely socialized generation of Christian political activists starting in the 1930s has transmuted into and how activists and the organised church respond to changed circumstances. Based on field visits to Ranchi district, plus a case study of the Koel Karo agitation, this study assesses the role of Christian social movement activists – the nature and efficacy of their involvement, their equation with mainline churches and their relationship with non-Christian adivasi activists.
    [Show full text]
  • Page 01 May 24.Indd
    www.thepeninsulaqatar.com BUSINESS | 21 SPORT | 34 QBIC supports Thakur, Fazal getet 52 startups in India tickets for two years Windies tour TUESDAY 24 MAY 2016 • 17 SHA’BAAN 1437 • Volume 21 • Number 6806 thepeninsulaqatar @peninsulaqatar @peninsula_qatar Emir’s mediation helps resume Defeat attacks Yemen govt’s on schools: talks with rebels AFP Sheikha Moza KUWAIT CITY: Yemen’s warring parties held their first face-to-face meeting in nearly a week yesterday after the government delegation schools and bring the perpetrators ended a boycott, the UN envoy to book. said. “Our schools are the “The destruction of schools are Yemen’s President Abdrabuh battlefield. It is time to not just ‘accidents’ of war. Educa- Mansur Hadi had agreed to end fight back,” H H Sheikha tion is under attack. Our schools the boycott after mediation by are the battlefield. It is time to fight the Emir H H Sheikh Tamim bin Moza told the World back,” Sheikha Moza told the World Hamad Al Thani and UN chief Ban Humanitarian Summit Humanitarian Summit which opened Ki-moon, the UN special envoy in Istanbul yesterday. in Istanbul yesterday. said. “What is missing are the mecha- “A joint meeting between the nisms and the political will to enforce two delegations to the Yemen (existing international laws). We must peace talks has started in the hold the perpetrators of these crimes H H Sheikha Moza bint Nasser at the special session “Education in Emergencies and Protracted Crises,” at morning,” Ismail Ould Cheikh The Peninsula responsible and accountable. Only Ahmed said on Twitter. the World Humanitarian Summit in Istanbul, yesterday.
    [Show full text]
  • 4YZ R Gzcfd Devad Fa Reert\ Eczxxvcd TYR`D
    4! *+ # %(,"-$ ","-$- !" .-,6,.6 7.'5$% *10630+$ #% 4" ) 9 + 7 ++6 48 9 7))! ##)) # 8) 56 7 # 757) )#+ + 8 # + 6) + 57+ # ++ #5 8 5 9 7 :;9 . /0 12 . ) $$% #$%&& #"$'('() *!+ CM Canteen scheme in rural areas, free technical education tate Finance Minister for girl students, modernisation SRameshwar Oraon present- of district schools etc. ed the first Budget of Grand After the Budget presenta- Alliance (Congress, JMM and tion in the Assembly, Chief RJD) Government in the State Minister Hemant Soren termed in the tune of 86,370 core for the budget as a revolutionary he Grand Alliance Financial Year 2020-21 focus- one because it focuses n poor, TGovernment headed by ing mainly on rural develop- farmers and the unemployed Chief Minister Hemant Soren ment, agriculture and allied youth of the State. “We have on Tuesday presented its sectors, education, health, wel- turned the chariot of gover- 86,370 Budget. Chief Minister fare, drinking water and sani- nance towards the huts of the in his Budget had tried to tation among others. poor. The Government has pri- address all section of societies The Budget makes provision oritised that no poor remains such as farm loan waiver of up of 25,047.43 crore for general hungry, no child of a poor man to 50,000 and 100-unit free sector, 32,167.58 crore for social rear gaots, no child is devoid of power besides stating that all sector and 29,154 crore for education, every person of the residents will be covered under financial sector. In the fiscal State has a house of his own and medical treatment for all up to year 2020-21, the State will get clothes on his body,” he said.
    [Show full text]
  • Mr. Pranab Mukherjee Mohammad Hamid Ansari Manmohan Singh Ms
    Name Mr. Pranab Mukherjee Mohammad Hamid Ansari Manmohan Singh Ms. Meira Kumar Mr. P. J. Kurien Mr. Karia Munda Ms. Sushma Swaraj Mr. Arun Jaitley Dr. Montek Singh Ahluwalia Mr. V. S. Sampath Mr. Hari Shankar Brahma Justice K.G. Balakrishnan Mr. Shashi Kant Sharma Mr. Justice M.N. Rao Prof. D.P. Agarwal Dr. M.S. Swaminathan Mr. Satyanand Mishra Mr. N. K. Raghupathy Dr. Vishwa Mohan Katoch Mr. C. Chandramouli Mr. Justice D. K. Jain Mr. Duvvuri Subbarao Mr. Baldev Raj Mr. Shailesh Gupta Dr. (Ms.) Poonam Kishore Saxena Mr. U. K. Sinha Ms. Mamata Sharma Dr. Vijay Kelkar Mr. Sam Pitroda Shri Jawhar Sircar Mr. Ratan Tata Mr. Krishnakumar Natarajan Mr. Rajkumar Dhoot Mr. Shiv Shankar Menon Mr. Shumsher K. Sheriff Mr. T. K. Vishwanathan Syed Asif Ibrahim Mr. Ranjit Sinha Mr. Alok Joshi Mr. Arvind Ranjan Mr. Pranay Sahay Mr. Rajiv Mr. P. K. Mehta Shri Ajay Chadha Prof. Ved Prakash Dr. V. K. Saraswat Dr. R. Chidambaram Dr. K. Radhakrishnan Dr. R. K. Sinha Mr. Wajahat Habibullah Dr. Pronob Sen Shri Arun Chaudhary Mr. Rameshwar Oraon Mr. P. L. Punia Mr. S. C. Sinha Vice Admiral Anurag G Thapliyal Mr. N. Srinivasan Dr. Syed Nasim Ahmad Zaidi Justice Altamas Kabir Mr. Mohan Parasaran Mr. K. K. Chakravarty Mr. S. Gopalkrishnan General Vikram Singh Admiral Devendra Kumar Joshi Air Chief Marshal Norman Anil Kumar Browne Mr. Goolam E. Vahanvati Mrs. Kushal Singh Dr. Y. V. Reddy Mr. Subhash Joshi Smt. Mrinal Pande Designation President of India Vice President Prime Minister of India (Chairman of Planing Commission) Speaker, Lok Sabha Deputy Chairman, Rajya
    [Show full text]
  • Report Good Governance for Tribal Development and Administration May 2012
    NATIONAL COMMISSION FOR SCHEDULED TRIBES SPECIAL REPORT GOOD GOVERNANCE FOR TRIBAL DEVELOPMENT AND ADMINISTRATION MAY 2012 CONTENTS Page. No. LETTER TO PRESIDENT I-II CHAPTERS 1 GOOD GOVERNANCE IN SCHEDULED AND TRIBAL AREAS 1-32 INTRODUCTION 1 GOVERNANCE OF SCHEDULED AREAS: HISTORICAL 1 BACKGROUND A. THE SCHEDULED DISTRICTS ACT 1874 1 B. GOVERNMENT OF INDIA ACT, 1919 2 C. GOVERNMENT OF INDIA ACT, 1935 2 D. DRAFT CONSTITUTION DISCUSSED IN THE 3 CONSTITUENT ASSEMBLY E. SPECIAL SAFEGUARDS FOR SCHEDULED TRIBES AND 4 SCHEDULED AREAS PRESENT DEFINITION OF SCHEDULED AREAS 5 SCHEDULED AREA1 AND PROCEDURE FOR SCHEDULING, 6 RESCHEDULING AND ALTERATION OF SCHEDULED AREAS TRIBAL AREAS UNDER SIXTH SCHEDULE 8 CURRENT PERSPECTIVE 8 ILO CONVENTIONS CONCERNING TRIBAL PEOPLE 8 (a) COMMENTS OF MINISTRY OF EXTERNAL AFFAIRS 9 (b) COMMENTS OF MINISTRY OF HOME AFFAIRS 10 (c) COMMENTS OF MINISTRY OF TRIBAL AFFAIRS 11 VIEWS EXPRESSED BY THE PRESIDENT REGARDING ROLE OF 13 THE GOVERNORS IN THE CONFERENCE OF GOVERNORS OF THE STATES HELD IN SEPTEMBER, 2008 PRESENTATION BY GOVERNORS OF THE STATES IN THE 15 CONFERENCE VIEWS OF THE ATTORNEY GENERAL OF INDIA ON THE ROLE 19 AND POWERS OF GOVERNOR GENERAL OBSERVATIONS 20 EXECUTIVE AND DISCRETIONARY POWERS OF THE 20 GOVERNOR CONCLUDING OPINION OF ATTORNEY GENERAL OF 20 INDIA 3RD REPORT TITLED "STANDARDS OF ADMINISTRATION AND 21 GOVERNANCE IN THE SCHEDULED AREAS" BY THE STANDING COMMITTEE ON INTER-SECTORAL ISSUES RELATING TO TRIBAL DEVELOPMENT. COMMENTS OF THE NATIONAL COMMISSION FOR SCHEDULED 21 TRIBES ON THE OBSERVATION
    [Show full text]
  • Social Movements, Political Parties and the Creation
    Questioning Borders: Social Movements, Political Parties and the Creation of New States in India Louise Tillin AbstrAct As the world’s largest multi-ethnic democracy, India has a federal constitution that is well-equipped with administrative devices that offer apparent recognition and measures of self-governance to territorially concentrated ethnic groups. This article analyzes how demands for political autonomy—or statehood—within the federal system have been used as a frame for social movement mobilization. It focuses on the most recent states to have been created in India: Chhattisgarh, Jharkhand and Uttarakhand, which came into being in 2000. These are the first states to have been created in India on a non-linguistic basis. Their creation has triggered questions about whether the creation of more, smaller states can improve political representation and help to make the state more responsive to diverse needs in India. This article draws attention to the processes which have brought borders into question, drawing social movements and political parties into alignment about the idea of creating new states. It ultimately looks Copyright (c) Pacific Affairs. All rights reserved. at why the creation of states as a result of such processes may not lead to more substantive forms of political and economic citizenship on the part of marginalized communities. While the focus of the analysis will be on the processes that led up to statehood, the conclusions offer some insights Delivered by Ingenta to IP: 192.168.39.151 on: Sun, 26 Sep 2021 14:03:59 into why pro-poor policy shifts at the national level in India have uneven regional effects.
    [Show full text]
  • The Legislative Assembly of Bihar
    STATISTICAL REPORT ON GENERAL ELECTION, 1990 TO THE LEGISLATIVE ASSEMBLY OF BIHAR ELECTION COMMISSION OF INDIA NEW DELHI Election Commission of India – General Elections, 1990 to the Legislative Assembly of Bihar STATISTICAL REPORT CONTENTS SUBJECT Page No. 1. List of Participating Political Parties and Abbreviations 1 - 2 2. Other Abbreviations in the Report 3 3. Highlights 4 4. List of Successful Candidates 5 - 12 5. Performance of Political Parties 13 -14 6. Electors Data Summary – Summary on Electors, voters 15 Votes Polled and Polling Stations 7. Woman Candidates 16 - 23 8. Constituency Data Summary 24 - 347 9. Detailed Result 348 - 496 Election Commission of India-State Elections, 1990 to the Legislative Assembly of BIHAR LIST OF PARTICIPATING POLITICAL PARTIES PARTYTYPE ABBREVIATION PARTY NATIONAL PARTIES 1 . BJP BHARTIYA JANATA PARTY 2 . CPI COMMUNIST PARTY OF INDIA 3 . CPM COMMUNIST PARTY OF INDIA (MARXIST) 4 . ICS(SCS) INDIAN CONGRESS (SOCIALIST-SARAT CHANDRA SINHA) 5 . INC INDIAN NATIONAL CONGRESS 6 . JD JANATA DAL 7 . JNP(JP) JANATA PARTY (JP) 8 . LKD(B) LOK DAL (B) STATE PARTIES 9 . BSP BAHUJAN SAMAJ PARTY 10 . FBL ALL INDIA FORWARD BLOC 11 . IML INDIAN UNION MUSLIM LEAGUE 12 . JMM JHARKHAND MUKTI MORCHA 13 . MUL MUSLIM LEAGUE REGISTERED(Unrecognised ) PARTIES 14 . ABSP AKHIL BAHARTIYA SOCIALIST PARTY 15 . AMB AMRA BANGALEE 16 . AVM ANTHARRASTRIYA ABHIMANYU VICHAR MANCH 17 . AZP AZAD PARTY 18 . BBP BHARATIYA BACKWARD PARTY 19 . BDC BHARAT DESHAM CONGRESS 20 . BJS AKHIL BHARATIYA JANA SANGH 21 . BKUS BHARATIYA KRISHI UDYOG SANGH 22 . CPI(ML) COMMUNIST PARTY OF INDIA (MARXIST-LENINIST) 23 . DBM AKHIL BHARATIYA DESH BHAKT MORCHA 24 .
    [Show full text]
  • ANSWERED ON:19.08.2004 PENDING RAILWAY PROJECTS in JHARKHAND Dubey Shri Chandra Shekhar;Mahto Shri Tek Lal;Murmu Shri Hemlal;Oraon Dr
    GOVERNMENT OF INDIA RAILWAYS LOK SABHA UNSTARRED QUESTION NO:3286 ANSWERED ON:19.08.2004 PENDING RAILWAY PROJECTS IN JHARKHAND Dubey Shri Chandra Shekhar;Mahto Shri Tek Lal;Murmu Shri Hemlal;Oraon Dr. Rameshwar Will the Minister of RAILWAYS be pleased to state: (a) whether the projects relating to the railways in Jharkhand State are lying pending; (b) if so, the present status of pending/ongoing rail projects and surveys in the above State, project-wise; (c) target set for completion of each of these projects and surveys; (d) the amount spent and likely to be spent on these projects; and (e) the steps initiated by the Government to complete the aforesaid projects within the stipulated time? Answer MINISTER OF STATE IN THE MINISTRY OF RAILWAYS ( SHRI R.VELU ) (a) to (e): A statement is attached. STATEMENT REFERRED TO IN REPLY TO PARTS (a) to (e) O F UNSTARRED QUESTION NO. 3286 BY SHRI TEK LAL MAHATO, DR.RAMESHWAR ORAON, SHRI HEMLAL MURMU AND SHRI CHANDRA SEKHAR DUBEY TO BE ANSWERED IN LOK SABHA ON 19.08.2004 REGARDING PENDING RAILWAY PROJECTS IN JHARKHAND. (a) to (e): The pending projects are considered as those projects, which had been included in the Budget with the proviso that the work would be taken up after obtaining necessary clearances. No such project is pending in the State of Jharkhand. The status of various ongoing projects falling fully or partly in Jharkhand, their anticipated cost and outlay for 2004-05, expenditure incurred upto 31.3.2004 and the target date of completion, wherever fixed are given as under:- S.No.
    [Show full text]