Voting a sacred duty, says PM Narendra Modi in 2019’s first Mann ki Baat

Says those who do not vote should feel the pain of not exercising franchise

January 27, 2019 09:53 pm | Updated January 28, 2019 05:25 pm IST - NEW DELHI

Photo: Twitter/@narendramodi

Photo: Twitter/@narendramodi

Describing voting as a “sacred duty”, Prime Minister Narendra Modi on Sunday said those who did not vote should feel the “pain” of not exercising their franchise. He also called upon the youth to perform their responsibility of voting.

In his monthly radio broadcast Mann ki Baat , he praised the Election Commission for its effort to ensure that even a single voter in a remote part of the country exercised his or her franchise.

First-time voters

Mr. Modi pointed out that people born in the 21st century will be voting for the first time in the 2019 Lok Sabha election, and urged the youth to register as voters.

“All of us must realise that being a voter, earning the right to vote is an important rite of passage in one’s life. Simultaneously, the sentiment that voting is our sacred duty, should grow within us naturally. For any reason, if one is not able to vote, it should pain one,” Mr. Modi said.

Talking about first-time voters, he said, “They face the opportunity of shouldering responsibilities pertaining to the country. They have embarked upon the journey of being partners in nation building. The time has come for a confluence of individual dreams and the nation’s dream.”

The Prime Minister also announced that he would holding a pariksha pe charcha (discussion about exams) on the forthcoming Board exams with students and parents on January 29.

In other issues, the Prime Minister’s first Mann Ki Baat for 2019 focussed on the achievements of the youth including the recent Khelo India games or the satellite launched by students.

“On January 24 ‘Kalam SAT’ fashioned by our students had been launched. The sounding rockets made by Odisha university students have also created many records. The number of successful space missions attempted since the country’s Independence till 2014 have been equal to those successfully completed in the past four years,” Mr. Modi said.

The Prime Minister began his broadcast with a tribute to Shri Shivakumara Swami of the Siddaganga Math, who died on January 21.

Remembering poet Sant Ravidas whose birth anniversary is on February 19, Mr. Modi reminded the people of Ravidas’s words that “man has been divided into castes and the human in him has disappeared”.

Mr. Modi remembered Netaji Subhas Bose, and said new museums and memorials had come up in Delhi in the memory of Netaji, Sardar Patel and B.R. Ambedkar.

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