Tag: BJP

  • Wife of Lucknow West BJP MLA dies of COVID-19

    By PTI
    LUCKNOW: The Lucknow West BJP MLA’s wife died on Sunday two days after the legislator had passed away due to COVID-19 complications, family sources said.

    Malti Srivastava, wife of BJP MLA from Lucknow West Suresh Srivastava, also passed away due to COVID-19 at Sanjay Gandhi Post Graduate Institute, the sources said.

    The couple were admitted to SGPGI and undergoing treatment for COVID-19.

    Lucknow West MLA Suresh Kumar Srivastava (76) had died of the viral disease in Lucknow on Friday.

    Srivastava died during treatment at a Lucknow hospital.

    He was on ventilator support for a few days, a BJP leader said.

  • ‘Mamata government denied people central schemes, misappropriated Rs 5,000 crore’: BJP

    BJP national general secretary Kailash Vijayvargiya also claimed that assets of a minister in the TMC government have increased exponentially since 2006.

  • Veteran TMC leader pitted against actor-turned-BJP greenhorn in Bhabanipur

    By PTI
    KOLKATA: A seasoned actor but a greenhorn in electoral politics, Rudranil Ghosh has been fielded by the BJP from the prestigious Bhabanipur assembly constituency in south Kolkata, a seat left by Bengal Chief Minister and TMC boss Mamata Banerjee as she chose to contest the polls from Nandigram.

    The TMC chief had described the seat, of which she is the sitting MLA and a resident, as her “boro bon” (elder sister) at a poll rally in Nandigram, and reposed faith in veteran politician and state power minister Sobhandeb Chattopadhyay to make a hat-trick of wins for the party.

    Under the shadow of Banerjee’s influence, the assembly segment has been the stronghold of the ruling TMC since it came into being for the second time in 2011, following the delimitation exercise.

    For Chattopadhyay, who had fought assembly elections seven times and won each of the contests, the constituency is his home turf as he is a resident of the area and exercises his franchise there.

    The BJP, however, described Banerjee’s decision to leave Bhabanipur and fight against her protege-turned- adversary Suvendu Adhikari of the saffron party from Nandigram, as a “desperate move sensing imminent defeat”.

    Ghosh, who has received accolades for his performances in ‘Vinci Da’ and ‘Chaplin’, said a large section of people in Bhabanipur are non-Bengalis and may have not watched his films, but they are aware of his social work in the area.

    “Sixty per cent of the voters here may have not seen my films, but they know me for my social work. They also know that no graft charge has ever been filed against me. People in Bhabanipur have become disillusioned with Mamata Banerjee in the last couple of years. She fled to Nandigram sensing imminent defeat here,” Ghosh, who was once an aide of the TMC supremo but fell out with her two years back, told PTI.

    The constituency, which has 2,06,272 voters, is home to a sizeable number of Gujaratis, Sikhs, Biharis and Marwaris, who live alongside Bengalis.

    Union Home Minister Amit Shah, in a bid to drum up support for Ghosh, recently held a door-to-door campaign in the Bhabanipur constituency, the only such public outreach programme by the heavyweight leader in the state.

    “His (Shah’s) energy is infectious. It inspires us. It acted as a catalyst for the swelling support pouring in for me,” said Ghosh who joined the saffron party in January.

    Talking about the trolling that he had to endure on social media after switching camp, Ghosh said, “I am not affected by these jibes aimed at me, mostly by the CPI(M) and the TMC camps.”

    “The Left had not worked for the poor people who voted for it for three decades. The TMC also did precious little for the underprivileged who had elected it to power in 2011. Instead, they cheated and looted them,” he said.

    Asked if he would be able to divide time between his on-screen commitments and political responsibilities, Ghosh said, “A Bengali film’s shoot lasts for 15 days. We don’t work in more than five films in a year. That comes to 75 days. I would still have 290 days to work for people.”

    To a question about close friend and film director Raj Chakraborty, who is contesting as a TMC nominee, besides other industry colleagues such as Chiranjit and Saayoni Ghosh, the BJP candidate said, “I have nothing to comment on their individual decision, their ideology.”

    “However, I don’t know if they will take responsibility for the atrocities perpetrated by the TMC, the theft of the cyclone Amphan relief funds, the theft of ration by TMC leaders, and the patronisation of cut money (bribery) culture all these years.

    If they are contesting on TMC tickets, they must also be supporting the misdeeds of the ruling party of the state,” he said.

    He claimed that his TMC rival Sobhandeb Chattopadhyay, despite being a senior politician, never protested against the wrongdoings of some TMC leaders in the area.

    Chattopadhyay, however, is absolutely confident of retaining the seat for his party.

    “I take every fight in my stride. I, as a veteran politician, know how to win a political battle. It is not a big challenge as the chief minister has already prepared the political ground here,” the 77-year-old TMC contestant said.

    The power minister, who was a state- and national- level boxing champion and has a mountaineering degree, is leaving no stone unturned to win this political game.

    Bhabanipur has never disappointed the TMC, except in 2014 general election, when the BJP managed to get a slender lead from this assembly segment — a part of Kolkata South Lok Sabha constituency.

    Banerjee’s trusted lieutenant Subrata Bakshi had won the seat in 2011, when the party fought the election in alliance with the Congress, by nearly 50,000 votes, defeating nearest rival Narayan Prasad Jain of the CPI(M).

    The BJP was nowhere in the contest, having bagged just 3.74 per cent votes.

    Within a few months, Bakshi vacated the seat to pave the way for Banerjee, who was then an MP, to get elected to the state assembly.

    The TMC chief had won the by-poll by a margin of 54,000 votes.

    The TMC boss, who is a voter of Bhabanipur constituency, also bagged the seat by over 25,000 votes in the 2016 state elections, while the Congress’ Deepa Dasmunshi came second and the BJP’s Chandrakumar Bose third.

    The ruling partys victory margin, however, fell drastically to a little more than 3,000 in the 2019 Lok Sabha elections.

    According to political analysts, Banerjee’s decision to fight the polls from Nandigram could be an outcome of a “political calculation” as she had alienated many constituents in Bhabanipur with her rhetoric against “outsiders” or non- Bengalis who live in the area.

    The TMC, however, has clarified on several occasions that the ‘outsider’ barb was directed at “goons who came from other states to create disturbances amid the elections”.

    Bhabanipur constituency will go to polls in the seventh phase of assembly elections on April 26.

  • ‘Outsider’ barb not aimed at Hindi-speaking people, they’re integral part of Bengal: TMC leader

    By PTI
    KOLKATA: Amid the raging ‘insider- outsider’ debate in poll-bound West Bengal, TMC’s Hindi cell president and senior leader Vivek Gupta asserted that the ‘outsider’ barb is not directed at the Hindi-speaking residents as they happen to be an integral part of the state.

    Gupta, a former Rajya Sabha MP, also clarified that the TMC has branded “goons coming from other states” as outsider or ‘Bohiragato’, and the party, during its campaigns, never targeted the non-Bengali population of the state.

    In an interview with PTI, Gupta, the ruling party candidate from Joransanko seat, said the “Hindi-speaking population residing in Bengal adds sweetness” to the state’s rich culture and heritage.

    “Our party is not against the Hindi-speaking population residing in Bengal. This term ‘outsider’ is aimed at goons and history-sheeters, who are entering Bengal from other states to disturb the law and order situation. The state’s Hindi-speaking population and the Bengalis complement each other well,” he said.

    Gupta, the editor of renowned Hindi daily ‘Sanmarg’, criticised the BJP over its “divisive politics” and blamed the party for “creating rift” among people on religious lines.

    “Bengal is known for its sweet dishes. The Hindi- speaking population residing here for decades and generations are the sweetener that further sweetens this sweet dish that is Bengal. They are very much a part of this state, and the TMC has never questioned it. ”

    “The BJP is trying to create a rift based on religion and language. This is what they do everywhere. In Bengal, this divide-and-rule policy won’t yield any result,” he said.

    Quoting excerpts from the Constitution, Gupta said every Indian has the right to go to any part of the country to work and reside there.

    “Mamata Banerjee is a seasoned politician; we never said anything about people coming to Bengal from other states.

    For us, those visiting Bengal during elections are political tourists.

    How many times did the prime minister visit the state to enquire about the well-being of its people, barring the period before elections? For us, Bohiragato are people who visit the state to create disturbances,” he said.

    Noting that the TMC dispensation has always worked for the welfare of the state’s non-Bengali population, he said more than 600 Hindi-medium schools have come up in Bengal in the last 10 years.

    “The TMC government has also set up a Hindi university. Please show me how many Hindi universities the Centre has built over the years. There are 70 lakh Hindi- speaking voters in the state. Why would the TMC want to antagonise them for no reason,” he stated.

    Gupta further said that he is “overwhelmed” with the response he and his party have received from the voters in central Kolkata’s Jorasanko constituency.

    Asked if the infighting within the party — after denial of tickets to sitting MLA Smita Bakshi and former legislator and now BJP member Dinesh Bajaj — would have any impact on the outcome of the elections, he said the party has weighed all pros and cons before deciding on his candidature.

    Gupta, who has been politically active for over a decade, was nominated to the Rajya Sabha in 2012.

    He was appointed the president of the party’s Hindi cell last year.

    Talking about his plans for Jorasanko, the TMC candidate said he would strive to develop the area as the cultural and tourism hub of the city.

    “You have Jorasakho Thakurbari (the ancestral home of Nobel Laureate Rabindranath Tagore) here, and many other historical places. I would try to develop the place as the cultural hub of the city,” he said.

    Jorasakho assembly constituency will go to the polls on April 29 during the last phase of elections.

  • Bengal polls:  EC observers ordering detention of TMC workers during polling hours, says Mamata

    By PTI
    BOLPUR: West Bengal Chief Minister Mamata Banerjee on Saturday alleged that she has come to know that three special observers of the Election Commission (EC) have “ordered police officers to detain TMC workers” ahead of the voting exercise, and said that she would move the Supreme Court against this “conspiracy”.

    The TMC supremo, while addressing party members at an auditorium in Bolpur, Birbhum district, said she had chanced upon WhatsApp conversations of the special observers, and asserted that she “might be show-caused (by the EC), but can’t be silenced”.

    Banerjee was earlier asked to furnish reasons for her alleged appeal to Muslims to vote en bloc for her party, and her remarks against central forces.

    She was also barred from campaigning for 24 hours.

    “Enough is enough. I don’t have any issue if they (EC observers) work for free and fair elections but they have been working only to help the BJP. They want to finish off Trinamool,” the TMC boss stated.

    ALSO READ | EC top brass reviews enforcement of COVID guidelines during campaigning in Bengal

    “These officials are giving orders to detain our men the night before polls and keep them in custody till the next day. I have seen their WhatsApp conversations; they were given to me by a reporter.

    And it must have originally come from BJP men,” she said, showing the transcript of a purported chat between the special observers and top officials, including district magistrates and police superintendents.

    The CM further said that her party will not take such things lying down and move the Supreme Court against this “conspiracy and partisan approach” after the elections.

    “Is it your job (EC special observer) to ask the police to detain people?” the CM wondered.

    Expressing outrage over the fact that an EC special observer has “named active TMC workers in the chat and branded them as trouble mongers”, Banerjee claimed that the official has also “asked the police to arrest all of them so that they cannot be seen anywhere during the polling exercise”.

    “In the chat, the special police observer described TMC activists as ‘goons’ who are not allowing BJP agents to carry out their work.

    Can the EC use such epithet against a party?” the TMC supremo said.

    Contending that her government had been tolerating such “intimidation and interference since 2016 polls,” she said, “We will move the apex court to discuss ways that can be adopted to ensure that elections are held impartially in the days to come.

    ” Insisting that she had no issue if state government officials and security forces performed ‘Raj Dharma’, the CM stated that the EC has acted in a “partisan manner” against the TMC and favoured the saffron camp in Naihati, Bijpur, Kanchrapara, Mangalkot, Budbud, Goalpokhor, Uttar Dumdum.

    “If someone is illegally detained the night before the polls, his family should go to respective police stations and register protests.

    These three retired persons (EC-appointed observers who are retired IAS and IPS officers) won’t be able to influence the elections.

    Their partisan conduct will help the BJP win just about seven-eight seats.

    “I personally don’t believe the BJP will be able to cross the 70-seat mark,” she claimed.

    Banerjee also held the EC responsible for the spike in COVID-19 cases in the state, maintaining that movement of lakhs of people from one district to another for poll-related work was the reason behind it.

    “Central Armed Police Forces (CAPF) jawans and people who came in from other states for campaigning were not made to undergo RT-PCR tests,” she said.

    Taking a jibe at the poll panel, Banerjee also said that the EC banned big rallies in the poll-bound state “only after the central leaders wrapped up their meetings, as they barely drew crowds”.

    “You (EC) steadfastly stuck to your plan of holding the elections in eight phases, despite the COVID-19 surge. Is EC a mirror of the BJP, a parrot of the saffron party?” she underscored.

    Claiming that the autopsy reports of Cooch Behar firing victims have confirmed that shots were targeted at their torsos, the TMC supremo sought to know “under whose instructions was this done? The CID probe will nail those involved in the case.”

    In a dig at PM Narendra Modi over his “Atmanirbhar Bharat” campaign, she said the COVID-19 situation proved the hollowness of the drive “as medicines, vaccine, oxygen, everything went missing”.

    Alleging that the PM and the home minister were making plans to capture Bengal when they should have ensured adequate vaccine and oxygen supply, she said, “Both of them should have resigned over this failure.

    Did they not know in January that COVID-19 will strike again?” Pointing out that the Centre has asked a PSU in Bengal to supply oxygen cylinders to Uttar Pradesh, “depriving the people of this state”, she said, “We are using industrial oxygen for medical purposes.

    We are procuring 5,000 cylinders, and currently have 15,000 more in stock,” she added.

    Claiming that the Centre “seems to be bothered only about Gujarat and Uttar Pradesh”, the CM said, “Given the grave situation in those states, I am not saying they should not get these facilities.

    But there has to be a balanced rationing system for all affected states.

    “Beyond chest-thumping and propaganda, this monumentally incompetent central government is of no use.”

    She further said her government, with its own resources, has so far vaccinated one lakh people.

    The TMC supremo urged the party’s Birbhum district president, Anubrata Mondal, to move court and seek protection if he is put under EC surveillance “like before”.

    She asked party members to be on guard against “intimidation by central forces”.

    Banerjee, during the day, offered prayers at the Tarapith Kali temple in the district.

    “I prayed for the well being of the people of the state, their prosperity. I prayed that communal forces do not get to rear their heads in Bengal,” she posted on Facebook.

  • Centre favouring BJP states in vaccination, says Mamata Banerjee

    By Express News Service
    KOLKATA:  West Bengal Chief Minister Mamata Banerjee on Friday accused the Centre of favouring some states over the others when it comes to vaccine distribution.  She also charged that New Delhi has diverted the supply of medical oxygen meant for West Bengal to the BJP-ruled Uttar Pradesh.

    “Gujarat has been given enough doses to vaccinate 60 per cent of its population. Other states are being allotted only enough doses to cover about 15 to 20 per cent of their population,” she said while addressing the media.  She said in Gujarat, vaccines are being administered to people in the BJP offices. 

    Attacking the Centre over oxygen supply, the Trinamool Congress supremo said, “SAIL (Steel Authority of India Ltd) used to supply oxygen to West Bengal. There was an instruction yesterday from the Centre that SAIL would now supply the same oxygen to Uttar Pradesh. Is West Bengal a beggar? When it comes to election, they come here with an aim to capture Bengal. When it comes to an oxygen supply, they are diverting it to other states’’.

    The chief minister said the state government has procured 5,000 cylinders of oxygen and send them to Covid-19 hospitals. She again blamed the Centre for India’s present Covid situation. She charged that the Centre’s mismanagement has driven the country to a crisis situation. Mamata also accused the BJP leaders of spreading Covid-19 in the state by bringing outsiders to attend election events.   

    She, once again attacked the Election Commission, over its refusal to club the last three phases of the Assembly election. “The Commission to listens to the BJP. They banned roadshows and imposed restrictions after the Prime Minister cancelled his four rallies on Thursday,’’ she said.

    On Friday, the campaign for the seventh phase of the West Bengal elections ended. Thirty-four assembly constituencies are scheduled to go to the polls on April 26. A total of 86,78,221 voters 44,44,634 male and 42,33,358 women and 229 from the third gender will exercise their franchise. The focus in this phase of polling will be on seats in the southern part of the city, mainly Bhabanipore which is the stronghold of the Trinamool Congress.

  • Coal belt’s Jamuria to see three-way electoral battle, with CPI(M) young face Aishe Ghosh pitted against TMC, BJP rivals 

    By PTI
    One of the last remaining Left bastions, Jamuria assembly constituency in the heart of Paschim Bardhaman’s coal belt will witness a triangular battle between CPI(M)’s young face Aishe Ghosh, JNU Students’ Union president against Trinamool’s coal miner-candidate Hareram Singh and BJP’s Tapas Roy in polling slated for Monday, April 26.

    Jamuria has till now withstood Trinamool’s onslaught in the last two assembly elections returning CPI(M)’s Jahanara Khan twice in the last two assembly elections.

    This time round the party decided to risk fielding Aishe Ghosh, a student debutante from the constituency replacing a veteran law-maker.

    Ghosh who came into the limelight during the agitation in the premier university which also threw up another Left leader Kanhaiya Kumar, the young doctoral scholar has been a prominent face in protests against the CAA and new farm laws.

    The newcomer is however not a greenhorn as far as the coal belt is concerned having been brought up in the colliery belt of the Burdwan.

    The Trinamool Congress has nominated Hareram Singh, a coal mine worker and a leader of the party’s labour wing INTTUC-approved coal mine workers association in this area.

    The TMC is betting on Singh to wrest the constituency, which has large numbers of coal miners.

    The BJP, which had a huge lead in Jamuria in the 2019 Lok Sabha elections as part of the Asansol constituency, has put up Tapas Roy as its candidate and is hoping to ride on a wave to win the seat.

    Lack of safe drinking water, pollution and bad roads in this colliery belt are major problems faced in day to day life, according to locals, who also complain that though there are quite a few schools in the constituency, there is only one college catering to a large catchment area.

    “We have to depend on primary health centres in the area for medical requirements or travel to Durgapur or Asansol for treatment,” said Mukta Das, a resident of Damodarpur.

    Of the 2.22 lakh voters in Jamuria, 27 per cent are from the minority community, while around 25 per cent belong to the scheduled castes and tribes, an official said.

    CPI(M) area secretary Manoj Dutta claimed that apart from some sponge iron factories, no major industry have come up in Jamuria during TMC’s rule in the last 10 years.

    “At least two industries, including one steel factory, proposed during the Left Front government have not seen the light of the day, thus depriving local people of much needed job opportunities,” Dutta told PTI.

    Expressing confidence that the CPI(M) will hold on to the seat, he said that just as Ghosh had led the anti-fee hike protests at JNU, she will also be vocal in the assembly for overall development of Jamuria.

    Contending that the people of Jamuria had benefited from various welfare schemes taken up by chief minister Mamata Banerjee statewide, TMC candidate Singh alleged that the local populace were deprived of any development initiative by its CPI(M) representatives over the years.

    “We will wrest the seat from CPI(M) this time as the welfare schemes like `Duare Sarka’, `Kanyashree ‘have benefitted the people,” he said.

    Claiming he has received an overwhelming response from local people, BJP candidate Roy said that people have faith in Prime Minister Narendra Modi’s development initiatives and that this will give rich dividends to the saffron party in this election.

    “People of Jamuria have seen governments of both the Left Front and the Trinamool Congress and know that neither has done anything to solve their long pending problems relating to drinking water, pollution and jobs,” Roy said.

    The BJP is also raking up coal and sand smuggling in Jamuria as major issues in this election.

    BJP leaders claim illegal coal mining from abandoned mines of Eastern Coalfields Ltd. in the area has increased in the last decade.

  • ‘Will give you two slaps’: Union Minister to COVID patient’s son for seeking oxygen cylinder

    By PTI
    DAMOH: A video purportedly showing Union Culture Minister Prahlad Patel telling a man who sought oxygen cylinder for his ailing mother that he would get “two slaps” if he spoke rudely went viral on Thursday.

    While the opposition Congress took swipes at him over the incident, the Union minister of state could not be contacted for comment on the video.

    Patel, who is the MP from Damoh, was inspecting the district hospital here two days after oxygen cylinders were looted from the hospital.

    A man approached him saying his mother, a COVID-19 patient, needed oxygen cylinder.

    She was told she will get one after 36 hours, but it was yet to be provided, he said.

    As the man raised a finger at Patel while talking, an irked minister gestured him to lower his finger, and said, “If you spoke in this manner, you will get two slaps. (Aisa Bolega To Do Khayega).”

    The man replied that he was ready to accept the slaps and his mother was already taking the blows.

    “Tell me what to do,” the man was heard saying in the video. Apparently realising that the incident was being recorded, Patel said to the man, “Calm down.

    Is anyone refusing you (the oxygen)? The man replied in a feeble voice that he had indeed been denied oxygen.

    As the video began to circulate, state Congress chief spokesperson K K Mishra tweeted, “Before the by-poll, each virus patient of Damoh was driven to Bhopal or Jabalpur by the cars of MP ministers and admitted to hospitals.

    “Now when a BJP activist was requesting for oxygen to save the life of his mother, Union Minister Prahlad Patel was talking about slapping him twice as the work is accomplished (election is over).”

    The Union minister could not be contacted for reaction.

    District BJP president Pritam Singh Lodhi refused to comment, saying Patel himself should be contacted.

    On Tuesday night, family members of patients admitted at the Damoh district hospital forcibly took away oxygen cylinders.

    The hospital management had to call in police to bring the situation under control.

    No restrictions on movement or gatherings had been imposed in the district which had an Assembly by-election on April 17.

    On April 19, curfew was imposed.

    On Thursday, Damoh reported 167 coronavirus cases, its highest daily rise.

    Madhya Pradesh on Thursday reported 12,384 fresh coronavirus cases, which took its overall count to 4,59,195, the state health department said.

    On Wednesday, the state had reported its highest one- day spike of 13,107 cases.

    As 75 patients succumbed to the infection in the last 24 hours, the death toll reached 4,863.

    A total of 4,863 patients were discharged from hospitals in the last 24 hours, pushing the count of recoveries in Madhya Pradesh to 3,69,375, the department said.

    With 1,781 new cases, Indore’s caseload went up to 96,330, while that of Bhopal rose to 75,405 with the addition of 1,729 cases.

    Indore reported 10 deaths, taking the toll in the district to 1,079, while the fatality count in Bhopal rose by five to 692, the officials said.

    Indore is now left with 12,738 active cases, while Bhopal has 9,773 such cases.

    There are 84,957 active COVID-19 cases in the state.

    With 50,974 tests conducted in the last 24 hours, the number of samples tested so far in the state rose to 72.84 lakh.

    The coronavirus figures in MP are as follows: Total cases 4,59,195, new cases 12,384, death toll 4,863, recoveries 3,69,375, active cases 84,957, number of tests so far 72,84,554.

  • ‘Lok Sabha Speaker should look into news of my death’: Sumitra Mahajan hits out at Tharoor, media

    By PTI
    MUMBAI: A popular misquote attributed to Mark Twain states: The reports of my death have been greatly exaggerated.

    On Friday, it was the turn of former Lok Sabha Speaker Sumitra Mahajan (78) to announce that she is very much alive.

    Her ‘clarification’ came after Congress leader Shashi Tharoor and some media outlets Thursday night announced the demise of Mahajan.

    Tharoor and others deleted the tweets after BJP leaders pointed out that she was hale and hearty.

    “What should I do? These people carried the news without any confirmation. They should have at least confirmed with the district administration in Indore,” Mahajan is heard saying in an audio clip.

    “The Central government and Lok Sabha Speaker Om Birla should take note of this,” the BJP veteran says in the clip.

    “This became all-India news. I started getting calls from my relatives in Mumbai. My brother’s daughter responded to Tharoor’s tweet asking who gave him this fake news.”

    Mahajan also wondered why some Mumbai news channels, in particular, flashed the fake news of her demise.

    After deleting the tweet, Tharoor had said he was relieved that Mahajan is doing fine and said he banked on “a reliable source” in putting out his tweet.

    The former Lok Sabha speaker’s son Mandar put out a video clip Thursday night, saying his mother is perfectly fine and asked people not to believe the false news about her.

    Mahajan was the Lok Sabha Speaker from 2014 to 2019.

    She earlier represented the Indore Lok Sabha constituency in Parliament for eight terms.

  • Bengal polls 2021: Election Commission-dismisses TMC allegations of firing by central forces

    By PTI
    KOLKATA: The Election Commission of India (ECI) on Thursday dismissed allegations by Trinamool Congress that two of their activists were injured in firing by central forces in Ashok Nagar assembly constituency in North 24 Parganas district, an official said.

    TMC activists had alleged two party activists were injured after they were hit by bullets fired by central forces outside booth number 79 in Ashok Nagar’s Tangra area on Thursday when a few party members protested against a visit by BJP candidate for the seat, Tanuja Chakraborty.

    Clashes broke out in the area between BJP and Trinamool Congress’ activists and bombs were hurled, police said adding that unidentified people vandalised one vehicle carrying central policemen.

    Click here for LIVE updates on Bengal polls 2021

    “Two of my party colleagues were injured after bullets fired by central forces personnel hit them in their legs. Both are undergoing treatment at a nearby hospital. The central forces are not doing the right thing,” TMC candidate Narayan Goswami alleged.

    Following this, the ECI sought a report from officials posted in the district and based on inputs dismissed the allegations.

    “There was no incident of any firing by central forces. We have no such report. This is a baseless allegation,” a senior official told PTI.

    During the fourth phase of polling held on April 10, four persons were killed after CISF personnel opened fire in self defence outside a booth in Cooch Behar districts Sitalkuchi area.