'The lion returns': Modi fans paint the town saffron
Thousands of men and women dance to songs devoted to Narendra Modi
Indian Bharatiya Janata Party (BJP) supporters shout slogans as they celebrate on the vote results day for India's general election at BJP headquarters in New Delhi on May 23, 2019. PHOTO: AFP
NEW DELHI:
Delirious supporters of India's ruling party banged drums and smothered each other in saffron paint as they celebrated Prime Minister Narendra Modi's landslide victory in the country's giant election.
Across India, supporters of Modi's right-wing Bharatiya Janata Party and the opposition Congress party were both stunned by the size of the Hindu nationalist leader's triumph, with early counts indicating a thumping majority for the BJP.
The normally austere BJP headquarters in Delhi turned into a raucous circus of drummers, firecrackers, dancing and singing with thousands of supporters filling the yard and nearby streets.
Some carried effigies of Modi bearing the slogan "singham returns" (the lion returns).
Across town, the Congress main office was a near ghost town. Most activists left by midday as it became apparent that Rahul Gandhi's party had suffered a severe drubbing.
Only a handful of dejected supporters sat in groups under trees, seeking to escape Delhi's blistering sun.
Rahul Gandhi concedes personal defeat in family bastion
The result was unexpected, said a Congress spokesperson Salman Soz. "We have to go back to the drawing board and see what went wrong."
Modi was showered with rose petals when he arrived at the party headquarters as rain started to fall.
He is expected to hold a victory parade in the holy city of Varanasi which he represents in parliament.
The city in the northern state of Uttar Pradesh was part of a Hindu nationalist wave that swept Modi to power in 2014.
Across the country, at the BJP's offices in the northeastern city of Guwahati, wild celebrations erupted, with people smearing paint on each other in scenes resembling the Hindu festival of Holi.
Thousands of men and women danced to songs devoted to the prime minister including "Aik Aur Bar Modi Sarkar" ("Once Again a Modi Government").
Similar scenes were repeated in other major cities, with supporters calling for India -- officially a secular country -- to become a "Hindu nation".
Huge crowds gathered in Delhi, waving BJP flags and Hindu banners and chanting slogans.
Delirious supporters of India's ruling party banged drums and smothered each other in saffron paint as they celebrated Prime Minister Narendra Modi's landslide victory in the country's giant election.
Across India, supporters of Modi's right-wing Bharatiya Janata Party and the opposition Congress party were both stunned by the size of the Hindu nationalist leader's triumph, with early counts indicating a thumping majority for the BJP.
The normally austere BJP headquarters in Delhi turned into a raucous circus of drummers, firecrackers, dancing and singing with thousands of supporters filling the yard and nearby streets.
Some carried effigies of Modi bearing the slogan "singham returns" (the lion returns).
Across town, the Congress main office was a near ghost town. Most activists left by midday as it became apparent that Rahul Gandhi's party had suffered a severe drubbing.
Only a handful of dejected supporters sat in groups under trees, seeking to escape Delhi's blistering sun.
Rahul Gandhi concedes personal defeat in family bastion
The result was unexpected, said a Congress spokesperson Salman Soz. "We have to go back to the drawing board and see what went wrong."
Modi was showered with rose petals when he arrived at the party headquarters as rain started to fall.
He is expected to hold a victory parade in the holy city of Varanasi which he represents in parliament.
The city in the northern state of Uttar Pradesh was part of a Hindu nationalist wave that swept Modi to power in 2014.
Across the country, at the BJP's offices in the northeastern city of Guwahati, wild celebrations erupted, with people smearing paint on each other in scenes resembling the Hindu festival of Holi.
Thousands of men and women danced to songs devoted to the prime minister including "Aik Aur Bar Modi Sarkar" ("Once Again a Modi Government").
Similar scenes were repeated in other major cities, with supporters calling for India -- officially a secular country -- to become a "Hindu nation".
Huge crowds gathered in Delhi, waving BJP flags and Hindu banners and chanting slogans.