

Friday, April 17: NEW DELHI, India (AP) - It takes a month to elect a new leader in the world's largest democracy.
In remote farming villages and sprawling concrete cities, tens of millions of Indians voted yesterday amid a deeply fractured political scene largely empty of national issues. The election won't wrap up until mid-May - and there may not be a new government selected until early June - but a series of bloody guerrilla attacks and blazing summertime temperatures failed to keep voters away from the polls.
Early estimates indicated a fairly heavy turnout, with most states reporting more than 60 per cent of eligible voters casting their ballots, Deputy Election Commissioner R Balakrishnan told reporters. More than 140 million people were eligible to vote yesterday.
The vote was the first of five phases in which a total of some 714 million people - more than 10 times the entire French population - will be eligible to go to the polls.
Yesterday also saw more than three dozen attacks by Maoist fighters in scattered rural areas across eastern and central India. The violence left at least 17 people dead - including police, soldiers, polling officials and civilians - and three election officials were kidnapped.
While the rebels, known as Naxalites, have long fought the government in a bloody insurgency, the intensity of the attacks came as a surprise on a day when tens of thousands of security forces were deployed.
"There is no record of this in the past - ever," said Mahesh Rangarajan, a political analyst in New Delhi. "For the first time they have struck like this on a voting day. This is a direct political challenge."
Even in the most troubled regions, though, authorities were optimistic about the election.
"People want democracy to triumph," said Tarun Gogoi, the top official in the insurgency-wracked north-eastern state of Assam, where there were no reports of violence yesterday despite militant threats that voters should boycott the polls.
In one isolated Assamese town, set amid one of the state's most violent regions, 30-year-old homemaker Monalisa Bordoloi Chakravarty was among hundreds of people lining up yesterday morning at a neighbourhood polling station.
"I am aware of the threat by militants, but one can't stay at home out of fear," she said.
Media reports indicated polling was brisk in the morning but slowed as noon approached - bringing temperatures that hit 105 degrees Fahrenheit (41 Celsius) in many parts of the country.
With more than 1.2 billion citizens, India normally holds staggered elections for logistical and security reasons.
Results of the massive election, which will use more than 1.3 million electronic voting machines in 828,804 polling stations, are expected May 16. According to the constitution, a new parliament has to be in place by June 2.
But few expect a clear mandate from Indian voters after a lacklustre campaign that has been devoid of resonant, central issues, a reflection of a country fragmented by differences of region, religion and caste, as well as the splintering of support for the two main national parties.
Polls indicate neither the Congress party, which leads the current governing coalition, nor the main opposition, the Hindu nationalist Bharatiya Janata Party, will win enough seats in the 543-seat lower house of Parliament to rule on their own.
Instead, many of the seats are expected to go to a range of regional and caste-based parties that tend to focus on local issues and local promises, from cheaper electricity for farmers to free colour TVs.
That means the elections will likely leave India with a shaky coalition government cobbled together from across the political spectrum - a situation that could leave the next prime minister little time to deal with India's many troubles.