Suzanne Lee Photographer

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30th March 2009, Mysore, Karnataka, India: Factory workers arrange the plastic phials that contain 10ml of indelible ink on trays to be sent to the sealing section. .Indelible Ink used for the upcoming 2009 India Lok Sabha Elections have been filled into the 15ml capacity phials. In each phial, 10ml of ink is filled, and if properly applied, can be used to mark as many as 700 voters. Only one company, Mysore Paints and Varnish, manufactures the secret formula of indelible ink that is used for all Indian elections since the biggest democratic nation in the world started using ink to mark the fingers of its voters in 1962. Photo by Suzanne Lee/The National

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Filename
SLee20090330-Ink-Elections-0044.JPG
Copyright
Suzanne Lee (2009)
Image Size
4368x2912 / 1.6MB
indelible ink ink elections 2009 india lok sabha ballot voter mark manufacture filling 15ml phial mysore paints and varnish mysore karnataka suzanne lee the national
Contained in galleries
Highly Secret : Indelible Ink, portfolio: varied
30th March 2009, Mysore, Karnataka, India: Factory workers arrange the plastic phials that contain 10ml of indelible ink on trays to be sent to the sealing section. .Indelible Ink used for the upcoming 2009 India Lok Sabha Elections have been filled into the 15ml capacity phials. In each phial, 10ml of ink is filled, and if properly applied, can be used to mark as many as 700 voters. Only one company, Mysore Paints and Varnish, manufactures the secret formula of indelible ink that is used for all Indian elections since the biggest democratic nation in the world started using ink to mark the fingers of its voters in 1962.   Photo by Suzanne Lee/The National