Tag: Birbhum killings

  • Birbhum killings: A saga of violence and corruption spawned by illegal sand mining

    By PTI

    RAMPURHAT: The trucks were groaning with the weight of sand that excavators had loaded onto those, as the vehicles made the difficult climb from the banks of the Brahmani river to a high-metalled road.

    The truck drivers will pay ‘hafta’ (bribe) to local leaders and the administration, the amount of which is based on the weight these heavy goods vehicles carry before speeding away to construction sites in Bengal and neighbouring states.

    Welcome to Birbhum’s world of illegal sand mining, which has spawned rivalry, murder, a culture of adversaries storing guns and illegally manufactured bombs, and of course, corruption.

    The latest victim of this was local TMC strongman Bhadu Sheikh, who was killed allegedly for his unwillingness to share the spoils that the excavators were bringing up from the river beds. Eight people, including women and children, were burnt to death in a suspected revenge attack.

    “Illegal sand-mining has been flourishing under the patronage of powerful people since a long time. For the local mafia and the powers that be, it’s a team game,” said Krishnapada Pal, a local who lives near the Baidhara bridge on Brahmani river, around 15 km from Rampurhat town.

    Some 80 illegal sand mines are scattered along the Mayurakshi, Ajay and Brahmani rivers in the district, from where local toughs operate with the backing of influential strongmen.

    Along with illegal sand mining, the other illicit industry in Birbhum famed for the Visva-Bharati set up by Nobel laureate Rabindra Nath Tagore, is quarrying for stones.

    The red stony soil of the area that has produced artists like Ram Kinkar Baij, whose statues adorn the gates of Delhi’s Reserve Bank of India, has also brought forth a vicious mafia, which runs the twin illegal industries with a ruthless, iron grip.

    According to Baneswar Ghosh, a retired government school teacher and resident of Kenduli, around 48 km from Rampurhat, the pattern of unlawful sand mining has changed from small scale “business” to a far larger, more organised affair over the years, as a real estate boom in the state and elsewhere led to heightened demand for sand.

    “The smugglers’ raj started in a small way during the Congress rule in the 1970s and boomed during the Left Front’s tenure and now the TMC regime. Islets were systemically dug up. They have now exhausted sand in the islets and moved to mining along the banks of rivers (bali ghats),” Ghosh said.

    A long queue of trucks, laden with either sand or stone stand parked on the National Highway-14 en route to Brahmani, where drivers could be seen paying money to a group of people. “This is nothing but a ‘fee’ these transporters pay. We are giving them receipts for that. The charges vary depending on the size of the truck,” Angur Alam, in-charge of the unofficial “check-point”, told PTI.

    Everyday, “permits” are given to over 700 trucks “overloaded” with sand or stones to pass through the area, he said, adding, each need to pay Rs 2,200.

    Sand is “smuggled” from these areas to North 24 Parganas, Durgapur and Asansol in Paschim Bardhaman district, and Behrampur in Murshidabad district as well as to neighbouring Jharkhand and sometimes to Bihar, Alam said.

    As per the the West Bengal Minor Minerals Rules, 2002, “no mining operation shall be done within a distance of 5 km” of a river. “Forget such rules. Those are for legal miners here we have dreaded criminals backed by political heavyweights,” claimed BJP leader Subhasish Chowdhury.

    He alleged that most of those who have been arrested, including Anasur Hossain and Newton Sheikh on suspicion of being involved either in Bhadu Sheikh’s murder or the alleged revenge attack, were engaged in illegal sand mining.

    Chowdhury said this unlawful practice and racket of extorting money have aided the rise of people, whose names now figure in the Birbhum tragedy.

    When contacted, a senior official of the West Bengal Mineral Development and Trading Corporation Ltd (WBMDCL) told PTI that miners are given legal permits to mine sand at identified sites on a “first-come-first-serve basis”.

    Local MLA Ashish Bandyopadhyay, however, rubbished allegations of rampant smuggling, and blamed the erstwhile Left Front government for such illegal practices in the region.

    He said that soon after the Trinamool Congress came into power, the administration controlled and eradicated illicit sand and stone mining as well as its smuggling.

    “Our administration has ended all such illegal smuggling, which was unrestrained during the Left rule. All these are false allegations of the opponents to malign the state,” Bandyopadhyay said.

    The local police though feels that countering this culture will require a massive effort.

    Incidentally, last year, the state police had set up a joint action team, with personnel from Purba and Paschim Bardhaman, Bankura, Birbhum, Purulia districts as well as from Hooghly to control and eradicate the menace.

    “We ought to have specialised teams to handle these criminals. And, we have to be backed up by the administration when a crackdown occurs,” a police officer said.

  • Birbhum killings: CBI team reaches Bogtui village, starts probe

    By PTI

    RAMPURHAT: A team of Central Bureau of Investigation (CBI) reached Bogtui village in West Bengal’s Birbhum district on Saturday and started its investigation into the violence that claimed eight lives earlier this week.

    Unidentified people had on March 21 set 10 houses on fire in the village, killing at least eight people, including women and children.

    The CBI team, consisting of around 20 members, went inside the house where charred bodies of seven people were found.

    “We are starting the investigation today. We have to conduct the probe on a war-footing as we have a deadline to meet,” the CBI official told PTI.

    Sleuths of the Central Forensic Science Laboratory (CSFL), a unit of the CBI, also visited the gutted houses and started collecting samples.

    The Calcutta High Court on Friday handed over the investigation into the Birbhum killings to the CBI and set a deadline of April 7 to submit its progress report.

  • CBI takes over probe into Birbhum killings; Bengal politics heat up over the murders

    By PTI

    NEW DELHI: The Central Bureau of Investigation on Friday took over the probe into the Birbhum killings hours after Calcutta High Court directed the central agency to replace the state investigation team formed by the West Bengal government to look into the gruesome mass murder.

    Earlier in the day, observing that the burning of eight people in Bogtui village in Bengal’s Birbhum district earlier this week has shaken the conscience of society, Calcutta High Court directed the CBI to take over the investigation and submit a report by the next date of hearing, which was set for April 7.

    The high court, which has been hearing a suo motu petition in the case since Wednesday, said that facts and circumstances demanded the investigation be handed over to CBI to instill confidence in society.

    The agency has already dispatched a team, along with eight experts from Central Forensic Science Laboratory (CFSL) who have visited the site of crime, officials said.

    Unknown assailants had thrown petrol bombs and set ablaze some 10 houses on fire in Bogtui village in the early hours of Tuesday, killing eight people including women and children, in a suspected fallout of the murder of a ruling Trinamool Congress deputy chief of the local panchayat.

    While opposition parties welcomed the high court order for CBI investigation into the violence alleging that the state police was trying to hush up the matter, the ruling TMC questioned whether CBI, which is under the union government, can be trusted to be impartial, claiming the BJP has been misusing central agencies.

    The Mamata Banerjee-led party however said all cooperation would be extended to the CBI but there would be mass movements if the saffron party uses it to harass TMC leaders.

    “We welcome the court’s decision. Only a CBI probe can bring out the truth as the police, acting as agents of the ruling party, were trying to suppress the matter,” state BJP chief Sukanta Majumdar said.

    While senior CPI(M) leader Sujan Chakraborty said his party was hopeful that the CBI would carry out a fair probe.

    However, TMC state general secretary and spokesperson Kunal Ghosh said the state government had so far done everything to unravel the truth and arrested a number of people and added, “We have seen how CBI has been used by the ruling dispensation to corner the opposition parties. So, we don’t feel that the CBI is an impartial agency.” For good measure, he added that if BJP tries to use the CBI investigation to “harass our leaders, there would be mass movements.” The High Court bench while passing the judgement ordering CBI to take over the probe had said that it found that though the SIT was constituted on March 22, “till now (March 25) there is no effective contribution of the SIT in the investigation”.

    The court, however, did not divulge details of the shortcomings in the SIT probe. Meanwhile, TMC leader and former Rampurhat block-1 president Anarul Hossain who was arrested Thursday in connection with the killings claimed that he had surrendered before police.

    “I surrendered before the police after ‘Didi’ (Chief Minister Mamata Banerjee) instructed me to do so,” Hossein said while he was being taken to a court here, where he was remanded to 14 days police custody.

    Police had Friday arrested Hossein from outside a hotel in the pilgrimage town Tarapith by tracking down his mobile phone after failing to find him at either his home or office, hours after Banerjee had directed it to nab the TMC leader if he did not surrender before then.

    The state police on Friday also recovered a huge cache of arms and explosives from various parts of the state, a day after the chief minister ordered them to throw a dragnet and unearth all illicit arms caches.

    “We have recovered caches of illegal weapons from various districts of the state, including Birbhum, West Midnapore. The weapons have been seized, and the crude bombs have been defused by the CID and police bomb disposal squad. Several people have also been arrested,” a senior police official said.

    The official, however, said they are yet to compile the arrest figures across the state. Meanwhile, members of the state’s intelligentsia hit the streets of Kolkata in protest against Birbhum killings.

    Movie directors, academics, painters, students joined a rally sans political flags to walk through busy city thoroughfares to protest the burning of eight people in Bogtui village.

    “Our demand is that the perpetrators of the heinous crime are apprehended and brought to justice,” Academician Pabitra Sarkar said.

    While film director Kamaleswar Mukhopadhyay said that people should rise above political and personal interests and join the protests against the killings.

  • Birbhum killings: Mamata reaches Bogtui village, speaks with kin of deceased

    By PTI

    KOLKATA/RAMPURHAT: Taking a tough stance, West Bengal Chief Minister Mamata Banerjee Thursday said suspects of the Rampurhat killings will have to be hunted down and arrested unless they surrender, and asserted that police would ensure the strictest punishment for the culprits.

    Banerjee, who landed at a helipad near Bogtui village where 8 people were burnt alive early on Tuesday, also promised permanent government jobs to members of the 10 affected families.

    #WATCH | West Bengal CM Mamata Banerjee meets the kin of those killed in #Birbhum violence. Visuals from Bagtui village, Rampurhat pic.twitter.com/iIhSQjLpu8
    — ANI (@ANI) March 24, 2022
    “Police will ensure strictest punishment is handed out to culprits responsible for the Rampurhat carnage. The case filed before the court should be water-tight,” she said.

    The chief minister announced a compensation of Rs 5 lakh each to the next of the kin of the victims, and Rs 2 lakh each for rebuilding the damaged houses. Those injured will be provided Rs 50,000 each, she added.

    ALSO READ: Birbhum killings: Congress delegation prevented from entering Bogtui village ahead of Mamata’s visit

    “Police has been ordered to throw a dragnet to unearth secret caches of illicit firearms and bombs across Bengal,” Banerjee said.

    Eight people, including two children, were charred to death as nearly a dozen huts were set ablaze in Birbhum district early Tuesday in a suspected fallout of the murder of a ruling TMC panchayat official.

  • Birbhum killings: HC asks Delhi CFSL to collect samples from site of incident, orders govt to file report

    By PTI

    KOLKATA: The Calcutta High Court on Wednesday directed CFSL Delhi to immediately collect necessary materials for forensic examination at Bogtui village in Bengal’s Birbhum district, where at least eight people were charred to death in the suspected fallout of a TMC panchayat official’s murder.

    The court asked the state government to file a report in the case before it by 2 pm on Thursday, when the matter will be taken up for hearing again.

    A division bench headed by Chief Justice Prakash Shrivastava, taking up a suo motu petition and a set of PILs, ordered that CCTVs be installed at the crime scene in the presence of district judge, Purba Bardhaman, and recordings be done until further orders.

    The bench, also comprising justice R Bharadwaj, directed a team of Central Forensic Science Laboratory (CFSL) in Delhi to visit the place of incident and collect samples for examination without any delay.

    It asked the DGP to ensure safety of witnesses, including that of a minor boy injured in the arson, in consultation with the district judge, Purba Bardhaman.

    The court observed that suo motu petition has been registered for fair investigation in the case.

    The petitioners in the PILs have prayed for a probe by the CBI or by any other agency which is not controlled by the state.

    Advocate general representing the government opposed the prayer, stating an SIT was probing the matter and that there was no need to transfer the case to any other agency.

  • Number of those arrested for Birbhum killings rises to 22, Left hold rally near at Rampurhat

    By PTI

    KOLKATA/RAMPURHAT: At least 22 people have been arrested so far in connection with violence in West Bengal’s Birbhum district that claimed eight lives, a senior police officer said on Wednesday.

    Family members of Bhadu Sheikh, the TMC Panchayat leader whose killing on Monday is suspected to have sparked off the attack with petrol bombs on some 10 houses in Bogtui village on the outskirts of Rampurhat town, claimed that Sheikh’s sons were among those arrested.

    However the police as yet have not released any names of suspects who have been arrested.

    All eight of them, including two children, were charred to death as nearly a dozen houses were set ablaze with petrol bombs in Bogtui village in the early hours of Tuesday.

    Eleven people were arrested the same day for their involvement in the incident. “We are grilling them (those arrested) to find out if there were more people involved in the incident. Some accused seem to have fled the village. We are trying to trace them,” the officer said.

    He added that forensic experts were examining the ravaged houses to get an idea about the “nature of the mishap”.

    The West Bengal government has constituted a Special Investigation Team (SIT), headed by Additional Director General (CID) Gyanwant Singh, to probe the incident.

    The Union home ministry has sought a detailed report on the incident from the state government.

    Meanwhile, the Left Front (LF) on Wednesday took out a rally in Rampurhat town of West Bengal’s Birbhum district, demanding justice for those killed in violence in the area the day before.

    LF chairman Biman Bose, who led the rally along with CPI(M) state secretary Mohd Salim, said any attempt to hush up the “mass murder” would be resisted. Bose slammed the police for “not doing anything” to rescue the villagers.

    Speaking to reporters after visiting the site of the incident, Salim alleged that illegal sand mining mafia played a role in the attacks. He demanded stern punishment for the perpetrators. “We want strictest punishment for those involved in the barbaric attack,” he said.