Residents of high-altitude Kinnaur were the first to vote in Independent India's first general election in 1951. Other parts of the nation voted a few months later. This was because elections to these regions were advanced to avoid incremental weather and heavy snowfall.
This election in Himachal Pradesh is set to witness a rare feat of sorts in the backdrop of a riveting fact from the pages of the electoral history of the hill state.
Residents of high-altitude Kinnaur were the first to vote in Independent India's first general election in 1951. Other parts of the nation voted a few months later. This was because elections to these regions were advanced to avoid incremental weather and heavy snowfall.
This region has another distinction. Among the lakhs of voters who will cast their vote, one man will be conspicuous by his presence.
Shyam Sharan Negi is officially India's first and now the oldest voter, set to cast his vote for a record time on November 9. Negi, a resident of Kalpa in Kinnaur district, turned 100 in July this year.
Negi was a government primary schoolteacher, and a part of the polling party in the state during the country's first general elections. He was the first person to vote on October 25, 1951.
Till the previous election in 2012, Negi was fit enough to walk to the polling station. But now he finds it hard to walk because of joint pain, said his younger son, Chander Prakash. His family said they would escort Negi to the polling booth. Negi, a father of 10, has voted in all the general elections and this will be his 12th Assembly polls.
In 2010, former chief election commissioner Navin Chawla visited Negi at his village to honour him as part of the poll commission's diamond jubilee celebrations.
A Modi fan
Negi is a Modi fan and feels that the prime minister has the determination to square the circle.
Negi recounted his experience when he voted for the first time 66 years ago. According to Negi, ballot boxes had to be moved and relocated using mules as the terrain was treacherous. The first polling booth, which was inside a school building under Chini constituency (present day Kinnaur), was set up 10,000 feet above sea level.