Here are the top 10 facts on the Assembly Election in Chhattisgarh:
Of the 18 seats in which voting is being held today, eight are held by the Congress and the rest by the BJP. The last phase of the campaign had witnessed bitter political sparring, with Prime Minister Narendra Modi and Yogi Adityanath accusing the Congress of being responsible for the rise of Maoists in the state and supporting "urban Naxals".
The Congress has focused on local issues - promising farm loan waiver and liquor ban in the state. Party chief Rahul Gandhi has accused Chief Minister Raman Singh and his son of corruption. The furious Chief Minister has hit back, saying Mr Gandhi was "sort of an entertainment" for people in the state. The Congress was dealt another blow on Sunday, when state party vice-president Ghanaram Sahu resigned hours before the polls.
The elections take place under the shadow of repeated Maoist attacks. The Maoists - who, for more than a decade, have called for boycott of voting - are fighting tooth and nail to derail the elections.
Intelligence reports on Sunday said Maoists from Maharashtra, Telangana, Odisha and other states are in Chhattisgarh. Drones are being used to conduct recces before security forces move in to make the areas safe for election officials.
Around 1 lakh security personnel have been deployed in Chhattisgarh to ensure that the polling goes off smoothly. More than 12 helicopters have been pressed into service in highly sensitive regions. For over two dozen booths, poll officials will be ferried by bikes, boats or on foot.
This morning Maoists triggered seven explosions and took on security forces in Kanker district, 175 km from state capital Raipur, in which a BSF man was killed. Over the last two weeks, there have been seven attacks on security personnel and visiting media personnel. Around 300 Improvised Explosive Devices have been recovered from the Bastar region.
The 66-year-old three-time Chief Minister, Raman Singh, is contesting from Rajnandgaon constituency. His challenger is BJP-turned-Congress leader Karuna Shukla, a niece of late Prime Minister Atal Bihari Vajpayee. Ms Shukla had been a member of the BJP for three decades. She left the party in 2013, accusing it of mental torture.
The Ajit Jogi-led Janta Congress Chhattisgarh party, which is expected to dent the Congress voter base, especially in terms of caste, has been wooing tribals by offering farm loans waivers and jobs for local youths. "We will win maximum seats from Bastar, the people there have lost faith in both the BJP and the Congress," said party spokesman Nitin Bhansali.
Mr Jogi, whose government was swept out by the Raman Singh-led BJP in 2003, has released his party's manifesto on stamp paper as a mark of his commitment. "If I don't fulfil promises made in it, I can be sent to jail," he had said, challenging the BJP and the Congress to do the same.
The second phase of the Chhattisgarh assembly polls will be held on November 20 and the votes will be counted on December 11. The results of four other states where assembly elections are being held - Mizoram, Madhya Pradesh, Telangana and Rajasthan - will be declared the same day.
"Natural Disasters Increasing Concerns": PM Modi On Independence Day In Pics: 10 Years Of PM Modi's Symbolic Headgears On Independence Day World Lion Day 2024: PM Modi Shares Stunning Pictures, Lauds Conservationists Mamata Banerjee's Sunday Ultimatum To CBI For Death Penalty In Rape-Murder Who Is Jasveen Sangha, "Ketamine Queen" Charged With Matthew Perry's Death "Don't Expect Anything From Me": Kolkata Hospital's New Principal Loses Cool Deadly Mpox Variant On The Rise; Sweden, Pakistan Confirm 1st Cases Supermoons Are Boring - Here Are 5 Things In The Sky Worth Your Time Doctors Hold Nationwide Protest Condemning Kolkata Doctor Rape-Murder Case: Updates Track Latest News Live on NDTV.com and get news updates from India and around the world.