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Congress-NCP seat-sharing talks enter third day

The venue of the closed-door meetings, which began on September 15, was today shifted from chief minister Ashok Chavan's official residence to deputy CM Chhagan Bhujbal's bungalow.

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The Congress and the Nationalist Congress Party (NCP) today continued negotiations to evolve a consensus over certain seats on which both of them have staked claim, as the two ruling coalition partners appeared close to clinching a seat-sharing pact for
the October 13 assembly elections in Maharashtra.

The venue of the closed-door deliberations, which began on September 15, was today shifted from chief minister Ashok Chavan's official residence in South Mumbai to deputy CM Chhagan Bhujbal's bungalow nearby.

Sources said the meeting began this afternoon, after both parties agreed to a formula according to which the Congress would contest 174 and the NCP 114 seats out of the total of 288. In 2004, the Congress and NCP contested in 164 and 124 seats respectively.

Sources said contentious seats include those in Western Maharashtra, where independent, and rebel Shiv Sena MLAs who had defeated NCP candidates in the last election were expected to be fielded by the Congress.

Three Shiv Sena MLAs, considered close to Congress leader Narayan Rane, had recently joined the party.

Among other seats, senior NCP leader and labour minister Nawab Malik has claimed the newly carved-out Kalina seat in Mumbai — a segment also being eyed by Mumbai Congress president Kripashankar Singh.

The Congress Screening Committee meeting, which was scheduled to be held in Delhi later today, has been postponed as seat-sharing deliberations were still on.

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