Hours after the first phase of the Gujarat assembly election concluded on December 1, hundreds of hoardings sprang up in Ahmedabad and other parts of the state. This was after the state saw a voter turnout of 63.14 percent in phase one.
The messages on the hoardings seemed benign enough, encouraging people to exercise their franchise. Except for a few put up by the Gujarat Garment Manufacturers Association, there was no indication as to who put up the posters. But the colour of the hoardings gave them away – saffron, the party colour of the Bharatiya Janata Party.
Newslaundry learned some of these hoardings – about 3,000 in Gujarat – were installed by an outfit tied to the Rashtriya Swayamsevak Sangh, its ideological fountainhead.
Here’s what we found.
At midnight on Sunday, Newslaundry traversed a 10 km stretch in east and west Ahmedabad, where local shop owners said these hoardings came up sometime in the last two or three days. They carried messages like “let’s go with the entire family for 100% voting”, “first vote, then eat”, “voting is our duty”, and “first vote, then do kanyadaan” – the last a reference to the ongoing wedding season in the state.
The saffron hoardings were spotted at Law Garden, Vadilal bus stop, Paldi Chaar Rasta, Cloth Market Road, Sarangpur bus stop circle, Sambhaav Metro Newspaper circle, Rupali Cinema Chowk, Khanpur, Nehru Bridge Circle, Kaushik Outdoor, Mithakhali 6 Rasta, Navrangpura bus stop, and opposite Nirma University.
BJP Gujarat spokesperson Yamal Vyas told Newslaundry his party did not put up the hoardings. “I am sure the Election Commission is very alert,” he said. “I have not seen these hoardings so I really don’t know. But I am sure these are not ours.”
Someone did claim responsibility though – Ajit Shah, the trustee of the Bharat Vikas Parishad (Gujarat). The Bharat Vikas Parishad is a member of the Sangh Parivar. Its Gujarat coordinator, Dinesh Vohra, described it as a “cultural organisation comprising the intelligentsia of the country”.
Vohra added that their awareness campaign this time is more “expansive” than during the 2017 election. Shah said the organisation has installed “around 3,000 hoardings” across the state for voter awareness. A BJP source alleged Shah has been “linked” with the BJP for “decades” but Shah said this is not the case.
Newslaundry on Sunday had also spotted hoardings – at Law Garden, opposite Nirma University, Nehru Bridge circle and Mithakhali 6 Rasta – urging voters to ensure a “historic victory” for Gujarat chief minister Bhupendra Patel.