Sixth phase: 14 mn voters to seal fate of 127 candidates in 8 Bihar seats

Purvi Champaran and Vaishali have highest number of candidates at 22 each; Pashchimi Champaran has nine in the fray, the least among the eight seats

Press Trust of India  |  Patna 

An elderly woman shows her inked finger after casting vote at a polling station, during the fifth phase of Lok Sabha elections, in Hajipur, Monday
Representative image

Four sitting MPs, including a member of the cabinet, are among the 127 candidates whose electoral fortunes will be decided by 13.8 million voters in the sixth and penultimate phase of on Sunday.

Among the 127 candidates, 16 are women - eight in Vaishali, four in Siwan and one each in Sheohar, Maharajganj, and

While and Vaishali have the highest number of candidates - 22 each -Pashchimi Champaran has nine contestants in the fray, the least among the eight seats.

Of the 13.8 million voters, 6.49 million are women and 476 belong to the third gender.

The poll phase holds significance for the NDA, which had won all eight seats in 2014 -- seven bagged by the BJP, while one, Vaishali, was grabbed by Ram Vilas Paswan's LJP.

The BJP has given up three of its sitting seats -- Valmiki Nagar, Siwan and Gopalganj -- in favour of Nitish Kumar's JD(U), which returned to the NDA fold in 2017.

Among the key candidates is Radha Mohan Singh, who seeks to retain Purvi Champaran, a seat he has represented five times. The 69-year-old BJP veteran is locked in a virtually straight contest with RLSP's greenhorn Akash Singh, who is than half his age.

The RLSP candidate is the son of Akhilesh Prasad Singh, who had won the seat on an RJD ticket in 2014, beating a BJP candidate.

The nomination of the young debutant had sparked off a controversy as a number of disgruntled RLSP leaders accused its of having "sold" the seat to Akhilesh

Radha Mohan Singh, on his part, is banking on the goodwill he has earned during his political career.

He struck an emotional note by declaring that this would be his last election.

In Vaishali, five-time and RJD candidate Raghuvansh is in the fray to wrest the seat back from the LJP, which has replaced sitting - a mafia don- turned-politician - with Veena Devi, a former MLA previously associated with the BJP.

Sitting BJP is fighting to retain Sheohar, where her principal challenger is RJD's Syed Faisal Ali, a resident of district based in and a by profession.

Tej Pratap Yadav, the elder son of the jailed RJD supremo, had revolted against the party's decision and fielded his confidant who, however, is not in the fray as his nomination papers got rejected.

Siwan is witnessing a contest between two women married to local musclemen. Sitting stands deprived of a chance to seek re-election as the seat has this time gone to the JD(U), which has fielded local MLA Kavita Singh, who is married to

was denied a ticket by the JD(U) because of his involvement in criminal cases.

The RJD has once again placed its bets on Heena Shahab, who has lost as party candidate from the seat in the last two elections. She is married to the dreaded Mohd Shahabuddin, a four-time MP currently serving sentence in a double-murder case and whose name has surfaced in several high-profile cases, including murders of former JNU student and

In Valmiki Nagar, sitting has been replaced by the NDA with JD(U)'s Baidyanath Mahto, who had won the seat in 2009.

Dubey had initially expressed resentment over the decision and threatened to contest as an Independent. He, however, relented following a meeting with in New Delhi, which was organized by the party's national in-charge for the state Bhupendra Yadav.

The Mahagathbandhan is represented by the Congress, which has fielded Shashwat Kedar, a debutant whose grandfather had served as the of and the under Indira Gandhi.

His father had also served as an MP from the now-abolished seat of Bettiah in the 1980s.

In Gopalganj, a reserved seat, sitting has been made to stand down in favor of JD(U)'s The principal challenger here is Surendra Ram, a party-hopper who is contesting the election on an RJD ticket. He has previously fought assembly polls on tickets of the RJD and the LJP as well as an Independent.

Initially, there were speculations that Tejashwi Yadav, Lalu Prasad's younger son who has emerged as the RJD's de facto in the father's absence, was willing to give up Gopalganj in favour of the BSP, with which he was hopeful of an electoral understanding. However, that did not materialise as the Mayawati-led party decided to field its candidates in all 40 seats in

Sitting BJP MPs and are defending their seats - Pashchim Champaran and Maharajganj respectively.

In Maharajganj, Sigriwal is up against RJD candidate Randhir Kumar Singh, whose father had represented the seat a number of times and is currently lodged in jail serving sentence in a murder case.

In Pashchim Champaran, the RLSP has fielded Brijesh Kushwaha, who was not known to most within the party until his candidature was announced.

(Only the headline and picture of this report may have been reworked by the Business Standard staff; the rest of the content is auto-generated from a syndicated feed.)

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First Published: Sat, May 11 2019. 14:36 IST