"Over 70 per cent of 12.147 million voters turned out during the Constituent Assembly polls. This was historic in the Nepalese context, the percentage was an all-time high," said Chief Election Commissioner Neel Kantha Uprety.
The turnout was higher than the 61.7 per cent votes cast in the last Constituent Assembly election in 2008 despite a boycott called by an alliance of fringe parties led by the CPN-Maoist. In the capital, the turnout was 75 per cent.
People voted amidst tight security, with 200,000 security personnel, including 60,000 soldiers, deployed across the country. Voting began at 7 am in almost all the 18,438 polling centres and concluded at 5 pm.
EC spokesman Bir Bahadur Rai said the polls passed off peacefully in most areas barring a few incidents of vandalism, explosions, booth capturing and clashes.
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About a dozen people were injured, including three children wounded by a blast near a polling booth in Bhotebahal area of Kathmandu.
Unified CPN-Maoist cadres captured polling booths in Gorkha district and polls were disrupted briefly by clashes in Jumla and Dailekh districts, the EC said.
The polls will lead to the formation of a 601-member assembly to draft a new Constitution, including 240 elected under a direct voting system. There was proportionate voting for 335 seats and the remaining 26 members will be nominated by the government.
Counting of votes will begin tomorrow morning after ballot boxes are brought to district headquarters. Results under the direct voting system are expected in a week and those under the proportionate voting after a fortnight, officials said.