West Bengal has morphed into an entry point for Bangladeshis, endangering the nation’s demographic fabric—this stark warning came from BJP chief Nitin Nabin during his Siliguri speech to industry stalwarts on March 2. Targeting Mamata Banerjee directly, Nabin lambasted her policies for prioritizing infiltrators over native residents.
Recounting Bengal’s fall from grace, Nabin noted how the state, once India’s industrial heartland with a 10% economic contribution, now lags at 5%. State neglect has fueled this decay, he said, depriving the region of crucial development.
Under Mamata’s watch, Bengal has descended into a hub of graft and goondaism, obliterating its cultural legacy. Nabin highlighted the paradox: locals are migrating out in droves, while Bangladeshi entrants are being housed and empowered. The deletion of over 50 lakh names from voter lists exposes the complicity, he charged.
Nabin rallied Bengalis: ‘This election safeguards not just your state but India’s borders.’ He vowed equal rights for all Indian citizens—irrespective of faith—but zero tolerance for illegal entrants. Mamata’s defense of these infiltrators in Delhi courts underscores her misplaced loyalties, he added.
With Modi’s leadership driving upliftment for the underprivileged, BJP remains resolute against infiltration. Nabin’s address underscores the high stakes in Bengal, where economic revival and security hang in the balance.