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Sunday, October 30, 2011

[ALOCHONA] NCC Polls: V for Ivy

NCC Polls: V for Ivy

History revisits as she emulates father's feat to post landslide
victory against party's favour

History has repeated itself in Narayanganj city. Selina Hayat Ivy won
the peaceful mayoral polls yesterday, defeating the ruling Awami
League-backed candidate Shamim Osman by over one lakh votes.

Her father Ali Ahmed Chunka, a popular labour leader, won the
Narayanganj municipality chairman polls in 1974 without the support of
his own party, the then ruling AL.

In the prestigious battle of the ballot, Ivy, vice-president of
Narayanganj city AL, polled 180,048 votes to Shamim's 78,705 votes.

Though the BNP-backed mayoral candidate Taimur Alam Khandaker had
announced a boycott of the polls only hours before voting commenced,
he garnered 7,616 votes.

Returning Officer Biswas Lutfur Rahman announced the unofficial
results at the polls control room around 1:00am today. He said the
voter turnout had been 69.92 percent.

Confident of victory through observing the trends of early results,
Ivy in her instant reaction thanked the people for their wholehearted
support to her and their contribution to making the polls free and
fair.

"Defying fears of violence they came out of their homes and gave their
verdict against criminals, extortionists and land-grabbers."

"It's a victory of the people," said an exultant Ivy, who portrayed
herself as a "people's candidate" on the campaign trail after her
party's central leaders had declined to back her in the vote.

Thirty-seven years ago, AL chief and prime minister Bangabandhu Sheikh
Mujibur Rahman picked Khoka Mohiuddin, who suffered a heavy defeat and
came third in the electoral race.

This time, Bangabandhu's daughter and ruling AL chief Sheikh Hasina
lent her support to Shamim over Ivy at the maiden polls for the newly
formed Narayanganj City Corporation.

But the people of Narayanganj had the final say. They sent, according
to political analysts, a very significant signal to the political
bigwigs.

They stood behind Ivy, who is seen as a candidate with a clean image
with a tested career in running city affairs as mayor of Narayanganj
municipality. They voiced an emphatic "no" to Shamim, a former AL MP,
who is alleged to have deep links with the city's crime ring.

Dr Ivy flew from New Zealand to Narayanganj in 2003 to win the top
position of the then municipality by defeating the then ruling
BNP-backed candidate. She was re-elected mayor in the polls held in
early 2010.

For the last eight years, she administered the municipality with an
image of honesty, integrity and transparency. Even her political
rivals from the traditionally opposing camp could ever bring any
allegations of corruption, nepotism and hooliganism against her.

Like her father Chunka, she is close to the downtrodden sections of
society who yesterday honoured her with a landslide victory. Riding on
their support, Ivy thus became the first woman mayor in a city
corporation.

The polls results also exposed, believe some political analysts, the
failure of the ruling AL top brass to read the pulse of the common
people in Narayanganj in terms of the kind of leadership and
candidates they expect in the future.

AL General Secretary Syed Ashraful Islam has congratulated Ivy on her
victory. Also LGRD and cooperatives minister, he said his ministry
would extend all-out support to her in running the NCC.

Ashraf said the government had achieved its goals -- making the polls
free and fair without deployment of the army and with a successful use
of the electronic voting machines.

Narayanganj city AL President Anwar Hossain told The Daily Star last
night that Ashraf had offered his congratulations to Ivy through an
SMS.

AL-blessed candidate Shamim, meanwhile, questioned the fairness of the
polls. He said the voting had been stage-managed in favour of Ivy.

An analysis of the results shows that Ivy had done well even in the
areas considered as strongholds of the Osman family.

Three other mayoral candidates fared badly as all of them forfeited
their security deposits.

Dispelling fears of violence and intimidation, voters came out of
their homes in the morning. The polls were held in a peaceful manner
amid the enthusiastic participation of voters.

There was no army to patrol the streets of Narayanganj on election day
since the government had already disobliged an Election Commission
requisition for military presence in the city. Rumours too had made
the rounds over the possibility of a militant attack being launched in
the river port township.

http://www.thedailystar.net/newDesign/news-details.php?nid=208613
http://www.amardeshonline.com/pages/details/2011/10/31/115099


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