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Indian man amputates finger after voting for wrong party

20 April 2019, MVT 09:00
An Indian voter gets her finger marked with ink at a polling station during India's general election in Shahpur near Muzaffarrnagar in the northern Indian state of Uttar Pradesh on April 11, 2019. - India's mammoth six-week general election kicked off April 11, with polling stations in the country's northeast among the first to open. (Photo by Money SHARMA / AFP)
20 April 2019, MVT 09:00

An Indian man chopped off his index finger in desperation after voting for the wrong party in the country's national election.

Pawan Kumar became confused by the symbols on the electronic voting machine and voted for Prime Minister Narendra Modi's party instead of its regional rival in Uttar Pradesh state on Thursday, his brother told AFP.

Distraught, the 25-year-old Kumar went home and chopped off his finger with a meat cleaver.

Even though votes are cast electronically at polling stations, the index finger of every voter is marked with indelible ink after they cast ballots, to make sure they do not vote again.

"He was very happy that he was voting for the first time ever," Kumar's brother Kailash Chandra told AFP by phone.

"But once he realised his mistake, he was so distraught that he chopped off his inked finger."

"Every time he saw his ink-marked finger, he felt angry."

Chandra said the family rushed Kumar to the hospital, and videos circulating online showed the first-time voter sporting a bandaged hand standing over the butcher's knife outside a toilet.

"I wanted to vote for elephant but it went to flower," Kumar says on one video, adding that he had not been pressured to cast his ballot for a particular party.

The lotus is the symbol of the Bharatiya Janata Party while the Bahujan Samaj Party, part of an alliance fighting Modi in the northern state, uses the elephant. The party symbol is used on voting machines along with the candidate's photographs.

Thursday was the second day of India's marathon election which started on April 11 and runs through to May 19.

New Delhi, India | AFP

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