Tag: BJP

  • TMC asks EC to act against BJP ‘goons’ creating ‘ruckus’ in Cooch Behar

    By ANI
    KOLKATA: Alleging that Bharatiya Janata Party (BJP) ‘goons’ were creating a ruckus outside several polling booths in Cooch Behar, All India Trinamool Congress on Saturday wrote a mail to the Election Commission urging it to take necessary action on the ‘recurring issue’.

    In the mail signed by TMC MP Derek O’Brien, the party said that ‘BJP goons’ were ‘preventing’ TMC agents from entering the booths in four constituencies in the Cooch Behar district.

    “It is to bring to your notice that across several booths in the following assembly constituencies (Satalkuchi: Booth no 02, 38, 131, 137, 287, 127; Natalbari: Booth no 241, 176, 177; Tufanganj: Booth no 178, 187; Dinhata: Booth No: 237, 228, 229) in Cooch Behar, the BJP goons are creating a ruckus outside the booth and preventing the TMC agents from entering the booth,” the mail said.

    TMC said it is a clear violation of the law and against the ethos of free and fair elections, and requested the EC to “escalate this recurring issue and take necessary actions at the earliest possible as it is delaying the election process.” 

  • BJP releases Prashant Kishor’s audio clip purportedly saying ‘PM Modi, Mamata equally popular’

    By Express News Service
    KOLKATA: A controversy emerged on Saturday, the day election is being held in 44 Assembly constituencies, after BJP’s IT cell chief Amit Malviya released an audio clip where Trinamool Congress supremo Mamata Banerjee’s ekection strategist Prashant Kishor is purportedly heard saying “PM Modi, Mamata equally popular” as far as Bengal’s poll related issues are concerned.

    Taking on Twitter, Kishor, however, said the BJP highlighted selective part of his chat and reiterated claiming that the saffron camp would not get more than 100 seats.

    I am glad BJP is taking my chat more seriously than words of their own leaders!They should show courage & share the full chat instead of getting excited with selective use of parts of it.I have said this before & repeating again – BJP will not to CROSS 100 in WB. Period.
    — Prashant Kishor (@PrashantKishor) April 10, 2021

    “It is open? That momnt when Mamata Banerjee’s strategist realised that the Club House room was open and his admission were being heard by the public at large and not just a handful of Lutyens journalists. Deafening silence followed…TMC’s election was just thrown away.”

    In a quick reaction to the purported audio clip, Kishor tweeted, “Glad BJP’s taking my clubhouse chats more seriously than the words of its leaders. They should show courage & share the full chat instead of getting excited with selective use of parts of it. I have said this before & repeating again—BJP will not CROSS 100 in WB.”

  • Bengal polls: BJP’s polling agent stopped from entering booth in Tollygunge; Babul Supriyo intervenes

    By ANI
    SOUTH 24 PARGANAS: BJP’s polling agent, who was allegedly stopped from entering a booth in Tollygunge as the voting for the fourth phase of the West Bengal Assembly elections is underway, was allowed to enter after Union Minister Babul Supryo’s intervention.

    BJP’s polling agent at Gandhi Colony Bharati Balika Vidyalaya was initially not allowed inside the station. Further, BJP MP and candidate from Tollygunge assembly constituency Supriyo reached there and ensured the agent’s entry.

    “Till now everything is going smooth. TMC wants if some chaos can be created. Our polling agent has a valid ID but was not being allowed by the Presiding Officer and the TMC. We showed his details from the website. After digital verification, he is allowed now,” Supriyo told ANI.

    Cornering West Bengal Chief Minister Mamata Banerjee, he said: “The biggest challenge is to remove Mamata Didi and TMC from West Bengal. Aroop Biswas (TMC candidate from the constituency) has been the right hand of all her works. So is a challenge to change the atmosphere of terror here.”

    ALSO READ: First-time voter shot dead outside polling booth in Bengal

    Among the most high-profile contests in Phase-IV, one is the Tollygunge constituency, where BJP has fielded Supriyo against sitting TMC MLA Aroop Biswas. Biswas, also a minister in the Mamata Banerjee-led West Bengal cabinet, has been representing the Tollygunge Assembly constituency for the last three terms.

    Worth mentioning, Samajwadi Party MP Jaya Bachchan campaigned for TMC candidate Biswas. CPI(M) has fielded Debdut Ghosh from the seat.

    Voting for 44 constituencies in West Bengal’s fourth phase Assembly elections began at 7 am on Saturday amid tight security.

    This phase of the elections will witness an intense battle between 373 candidates in 44 constituencies of the state across five districts – Cooch Behar, Alipurduar, South 24 Parganas, Howrah and Hooghly.

    Among the 44 constituencies, nine are in Howrah, 10 in Hooghly, 11 in South 24 Parganas, five in Alipurduar and nine in Cooch Behar.

    A total of 1,15,81,022 voters will participate in this phase, out of which 2,63,016 are first-time voters.

    The fifth phase of the assembly elections will commence on April 17. Counting of votes will take place on May 2. (ANI)

  • Rahul Gandhi asks PM Narendra Modi to halt COVID vaccine exports, BJP takes potshot

    By Express News Service
    NEW DELHI: Congress leader Rahul Gandhi on Friday wrote to PM Narendra Modi, demanding an immediate moratorium on Covid-19 vaccine exports and opening up of the vaccination to “everyone who needs it”, while Union minister Ravi Shankar Prasad hit out at him, claiming the shortage in the Congress-ruled states was not of vaccines but commitment.

    In the letter, Gandhi sought more say to the state governments in vaccine procurement and distribution. He also asked for a provision of direct income support to the vulnerable sections amid the second wave of Covid-19 in India, as he extended his support to the vaccination drive.

    “I humbly request you to provide vaccine suppliers with necessary resources to increase manufacturing capacity and place an immediate moratorium on vaccine export,” Gandhi said.

    “Open up vaccination to everyone who needs it,” he demanded, seeking fast-tracking of approval of other vaccines as per norms. Prasad took a potshot at the Congress leader, wondering “after failing as a part-time politician, has Gandhi switched to full-time lobbying”.

    “First, he lobbied for fighter plane companies by trying to derail India’s acquisition programme. Now, he is lobbying for pharma  by asking for arbitrary approvals for foreign vaccines,” tweeted Prasad.

    “Rahul must know that shortage in the Congress-ruled states is not of vaccines but basic commitment towards healthcare. He should write letters to his party’s governments to stop their vasooli ventures and concentrate on administering the vaccines they are sitting upon,” added Prasad.  

  • Bengal polls: EC issues notice to Mamata again, this time over remarks on central forces

    By Express News Service
    KOLKATA: The Election Commission on Friday served second notice on West Bengal CM Mamata Banerjee for her statement against central police personnel deployed in the state on election duty. 

    The Commission asked Mamata to reply by Saturday.

    Two days ago, the CM was served the first notice for urging the Muslim electorates not to split their vote bank.

    In the notice, the Commission said Mamata Banerjee prima facie violated various sections of the Indian Penal Code with her remarks against the central force. “Prima facie, the completely false, provocative, and intemperate statements attempted to berate and vilify central paramilitary forces during the election process,” the notice said.

    While addressing rallies, Mamata Banerjee, on several occasions, hit out at central force alleging it was working at the behest of the BJP and threatening people to either cast votes in favour of the saffron camp or stop going to the polling booth.

    ALSO READ | West Bengal polls: BJP candidate’s convoy attacked in Howrah

    The Trinamool Congress supremo, who addressed four back-to-back rallies on Friday, asked why no complaint has been registered against BJP’s star campaigners and Prime Minister Narendra Modi despite their references to Hindu and Muslim vote banks in his speeches.

    “Why no complaint has been filed against Narendra Modi who talk about Hindu and Muslim (vote bank) every day. How many complaints have been lodged against those who had uttered the word mini Pakistan during the Nandigram campaigns?” Mamata asked.

    BJP’s Suvendu Adhikari, who contested against Mamata in Nandigram, uttered the phrase ‘mini Pakistan’ in his speech while accusing the CM of practising appeasement politics.

    Mamata said she will continue criticising CRPF’s interference till it stops working for the BJP.

    Referring to Commission’s first notice, Mamata had on Thursday said the EC can issue 10 notices to her but her reply will be the same.

  • Bengal polls: 13 years after Tata’s ouster, Singur seeks industrialisation

    By PTI
    SINGUR: Thirteen years after a farmers’ stir put Singur on India’s political map, having forced the exit of Tata’s Nano car project, industrialisation has emerged as the main poll plank in this constituency as the land, for which swords were crossed, has been rendered infertile.

    Battle lines have been redrawn in Singur, a place that along with Nandigram shook the foundations of the mighty 34- year-old Left Front regime and propelled Mamata Banerjee to power in 2011, with TMC’s sitting MLA Rabindranath Bhattacharya – a front-runner of the anti-land acquisition protest – shifting his allegiance to the BJP.

    The ruling camp has field Bhattacharya’s former associate, Becharam Manna, from the seat.

    Farmers, who had been handed over the land parcels that were initially acquired for the Tata project, now depend on government doles and petty jobs to make ends meet.

    Many of them feel betrayed as the TMC government failed to keep its promise of turning their arid plots cultivable.

    Ironically, both the TMC and the BJP have promised industrialisation in Singur this election, having got a whiff of local sentiments, with ‘Master Moshai’ (the teacher) — as 89-year-old Bhattacharya is commonly referred to — and TMC candidate Manna crossing swords in the area over the issue.

    The CPI (M)’s young turk, Srijan Bhattacharya, however, hopes that he would have the last laugh in the agrarian constituency, where his party desperately seeks to recover its lost ground.

    Rabindranath Bhattacharya, once the eyes and ears of Mamata Banerjee’s Singur movement, told PTI, “We were never against industry; we were against forcible land acquisition. Somehow, things went out of control. The people here now want industry. If the BJP comes to power, we will work to bring investments in the area.”

    Manna, who is trying his best to keep the TMC flag flying in the constituency, said agro-based industries are best suited for the place.

    “A few agro-based industries have already come up in Singur. The TMC dispensation had been putting in efforts to make this area a major hub of agro-industries in the near future,” he claimed.

    Srijan, the 28-year-old firebrand student leader, mocked both Bhattacharya and Manna over their assertions and said the TMC and the BJP are only repeating what the Left Front had said 15 years ago.

    “Both of them are shedding crocodile tears, having sensed the mood of the people. We had missed the bus back then. Only the Left, however, can change things for better,” the SFI state secretary said.

    Singur — once known for multiple crop farming – hogged the limelight after Tata Motors set its sight on the area to build its cheapest car manufacturing unit, Nano, in 2006.

    The Left Front government had acquired 997.11 acres along National Highway 2 and handed it over to the company.

    Leading from the front, the then opposition leader and TMC supremo Mamata Banerjee had called for a 26-day hunger strike, demanding the return of 347 acres that were apparently forcibly acquired.

    The TMC, which had a strong support base in the area with Bhattacharya as the sitting MLA, spearheaded a mass movement against the alleged acquisition.

    Despite numerous meetings and consultations between the TMC and the Left Front government, no solution was reached, and Tatas eventually moved out of Singur and built its plant in Gujarat’s Sanand.

    Land acquired for the project was subsequently returned to locals in 2016.

    The Mamata Banerjee government, over the last few years, however, failed to turn the barren tracts fertile as it involvea huge expenditure, and many farmers ended up selling their plots.

    According to agricultural experts, with concrete pillars and cement slabs embedded in the land, at least seven to eight inches of topsoil will have to be removed to make the plots in Singur cultivable.

    The TMC dispensation, even after hosting various business summits, could not bag any investment for the constituency that had given the party the political heft to rise to power.

    Over the years, the Singur movement might have found a place in school textbooks, but the residents here continue to stare at a bleak future.

    “What did we get out of this agitation? Nothing. Now we feel it was all a mistake. We have no work, and our land has turned infertile. We are living in abject poverty,” Biren Mondal, who got back his 60 Kottah of land in 2016, rued.

    The TMC, post its electoral reverses in the segment in the 2019 Lok Sabha polls, took up the job of restoring the land; but large swathes still remain unproductive.

    “Even in the tracts that has been restored, crop production is not up to the mark, unlike what was the case two decades ago,” said Mahadeb Das, a farmer who, too, was part of the movement.

    In villages of Gopalnagar, Khaserbheri, Beraberi, where huge tracts were acquired for the car project, at least 3,000 farmers and sharecroppers now thrive on Rs 2,000 cash and 16 kg rice provided by the TMC government, and most men in their families have moved out of Bengal in search of jobs.

    Gopal Das, who had willingly given up his land for the Tata project and had even got his sons trained for jobs in the Nano plant’s ancillary units, curse the Singur movement.

    “After the Tata group left, my sons found no job for two years. I used to run a tea stall. Now they work at a car plant in Gurgaon. Had the locals and politicians not stopped the company from setting up the car manufacturing plant, a lot would have changed in Singur. Our children would have been living here, with us,” he said.

    Riding on this resentment, the BJP made deep inroads in the area in 2019 by wresting the Hooghly Lok Sabha seat from the ruling TMC — which experienced a significant dip in its vote share.

    Singur, one of the keenly watched seats this assembly elections, has 2,46,726 voters.

    The constituency is set to go to on April 10.

  • Bengal polls: EC issues notice to Mamata again, this time over remarks on central forces

    By Express News Service
    KOLKATA: The Election Commission on Friday served second notice on West Bengal CM Mamata Banerjee for her statement against central police personnel deployed in the state on election duty. 

    The Commission asked Mamata to reply by Saturday.

    Two days ago, the CM was served the first notice for urging the Muslim electorates not to split their vote bank.

    In the notice, the Commission said Mamata Banerjee prima facie violated various sections of the Indian Penal Code with her remarks against the central force. “Prima facie, the completely false, provocative, and intemperate statements attempted to berate and vilify central paramilitary forces during the election process,” the notice said.

    While addressing rallies, Mamata Banerjee, on several occasions, hit out at central force alleging it was working at the behest of the BJP and threatening people to either cast votes in favour of the saffron camp or stop going to the polling booth.

    ALSO READ | West Bengal polls: BJP candidate’s convoy attacked in Howrah

    The Trinamool Congress supremo, who addressed four back-to-back rallies on Friday, asked why no complaint has been registered against BJP’s star campaigners and Prime Minister Narendra Modi despite their references to Hindu and Muslim vote banks in his speeches.

    “Why no complaint has been filed against Narendra Modi who talk about Hindu and Muslim (vote bank) every day. How many complaints have been lodged against those who had uttered the word mini Pakistan during the Nandigram campaigns?” Mamata asked.

    BJP’s Suvendu Adhikari, who contested against Mamata in Nandigram, uttered the phrase ‘mini Pakistan’ in his speech while accusing the CM of practising appeasement politics.

    Mamata said she will continue criticising CRPF’s interference till it stops working for the BJP.

    Referring to Commission’s first notice, Mamata had on Thursday said the EC can issue 10 notices to her but her reply will be the same.

  • BJP workers accuse Trinamool counterparts of vandalising party office in Durgapur

    By ANI
    DURGAPUR: Bharatiya Janata Party (BJP) workers in Durgapur accused Trinamool Congress (TMC) workers of vandalising the party office in Basudha area of the city on Thursday.

    “TMC goons have vandalised our office. They threw the articles outside the party office. If they think BJP can be stopped by such attacks then they are wrong. People are with us,” Raman Sharma, BJP worker told ANI.

    Polling in Durgapur will be on April 26 in the seventh phase of the West Bengal assembly elections.

    In another incident in Cooch Behar district, TMC workers accused BJP workers of attacking the party’s candidate from the Mathabhanga constituency on Thursday.

    BJP and TMC are at loggerheads in poll-bound West Bengal.

    The first three phases of the eight-phased West Bengal polls have already taken place. The fourth phase of the elections will be held on Saturday. Counting of the votes will take place on May 2.

  • Campaigning ends amid intense battle between BJP, TMC ahead of phase IV

    The high-decibel campaigning for the fourth phase of the West Bengal Assembly elections came to a close after witnessing an intense tussle between the ruling Trinamool Congress (TMC) and the Bharatiya Janata Party (BJP).

    While Chief Minister Mamata Banerjee was mostly the only big face for the ruling party during the campaigns, BJP brought out its big guns to give the TMC supremo a tough competition, with UP Chief Minister Yogi Adityanath, national president of the party JP Nadda and Home Minister Amit Shah campaigning all out. Voting for the fourth phase of the West Bengal Assembly elections will commence on April 10, covering 44 constituencies in five districts – Cooch Behar, Alipurduar, South 24 Parganas, Howrah and Hooghly.

    Ahead of the upcoming phase, Shah held several high-profile roadshows in West Bengal, which witnessed massive crowd turning the electoral fever in BJP’s favour. The Home Minister was also seen having a meal at a rickshaw puller’s resident in Domjur.

    “I visited only one gram panchayat, but the kind of enthusiasm that I saw there I am confident that Rajib Banerjee will win with a majority,” he said.
    The Uttar Pradesh Chief Minister announced that after BJP clinches victory in the elections, the party will create ‘anti-Romeo’ squads and put ‘TMC Romeos’ behind bars.

    To safeguard the interests of sisters and daughters, BJP will create Uttar Pradesh-like anti-Romeo squads in Bengal and put all TMC Romeos behind bars,” he said while addressing a public meeting in Hooghly on Thursday.

    Amid his tirade of attacks against the Bengal Chief Minister, Adityanath questioned why Banerjee was irritated with ‘Jai Shree Ram’ slogans, saying that “anyone who dares to fight Ram has to face bad results”.

    “On May 2, Bengal will get freedom from the TMC government. TMC goons will be taken by the law. Surely, the parties like Congress, CPM and TMC will definitely give protection to the criminals, but they will be sent behind the bars,” he said, adding that Banerjee herself will start chanting ‘Jai Shree Ram’ after the results.

    Meanwhile, Nadda also intensified the attack against TMC by saying that the state has decided to give Mamata Banerjee some rest by giving BJP a chance to serve people here.

    “The gathering at this event indicates that the people are eager to bring BJP into power in the state. They are saying that ‘Mamata ji ko aaram do… BJP ko kaam do’ (Give Mamata ji some rest and let BJP work),” he said.

  • Bengal polls: Trinamool accuses BJP of attacking its candidate from Mathabhanga

    By ANI
    COOCH BEHAR: Girindra Nath Barman, the Trinamool Congress (TMC) candidate from Mathabhanga, was attacked by Bharatiya Janata Party (BJP) workers while he was returning from election campaign on Thursday, alleged TMC workers.

    “BJP goons vandalised his car and attacked him. He has sustained head injuries. We demand action,” said a TMC worker.

    Polling for the Mathabhanga constituency will be held on Saturday in the fourth phase of the West Bengal assembly elections.

    BJP has fielded Sushil Barman against TMC’s Girindra Nath Barman and CPI(M)’s Ashok Barman from Mathabhanga constituency.

    The first three phases of the eight-phased West Bengal polls have already taken place. The fourth phase of the elections will be held on Saturday. Counting of the votes will take place on May 2.