Bangalore, April 5 (Inditop.com) The Bharatiya Janata Party Monday captured power in the Bangalore civic agency for the first time and pledged not to allow new slums in the city and to fulfill all other promises made in its election manifesto.

“The people’s verdict has increased our responsibility. We will try to fulfill whatever promises made in the party manifesto,” a beaming B.S. Yeddyurappa, the BJP’s first chief minister in Karnataka and south India, said after the party won the Bruhat Bengaluru Mahanagara Palike (BBMP) or Greater Bangalore City Corporation election.

Of the 198 seats in the BBMP, the BJP won 112 followed by the Congress (64), the Janata Dal-Secular (JD-S) (15) and seven Independents.

Voting took place March 28 with about 46 percent of the 6.6 million eligible voters casting their ballots to choose their representatives from over 1,300 candidates, majority of them Independents.

The BJP contested 197 seats, the Congress 196 and the JD-S 194.

“After New Delhi, Bangalore is the most important city in the country in drawing international attention,” Yeddyurappa told reporters.

He said, “We will not allow new slums to come up in Bangalore and will improve civic amenities in the existing slums.”

There are over 500 slums in the city, though officially only around 360 are recognised as such, entitling them to get water, electricity and other civic amenities. About 600,000 people, of the city’s population of around eight million, live in these slums.

The BJP’s promises in the poll manifesto include a mono rail network, local train service, eight-lane roads at all entry points to the city, making 93 roads into four-lane and a 1,400 MW electricity generation plant on the city’s outskirts for supply of quality power to Bangalore.

The party said it would make Bangalore a world class city with an investment of about Rs.25,000 crore (Rs.250 billion) in three years.

Monday’s victory is a poll hat-trick for BJP in three years.

It stormed to power for the first time in Karnataka in the May 2008 assembly polls, bagged 19 of the 28 Lok Sabha seats in the April-May 2009 parliamentary polls in the state, and in 2010 captured the Bangalore civic body.

For the Congress, it has been a dismal show in all the elections since it lost power in the 2004 assembly polls.

The results are a big blow to the JD-S as its efforts to expand base from rural areas of south Karnataka to urban localities have floundered.

While Yeddyurappa claimed the BJP’s tally is a proof of the good work his government has done in the last two years, the Congress and the JD-S spokespersons dismissed it as outcome of “muscle and money power and misuse of official machinery by the ruling party.”