Tag: Kolkata

  • West Bengal: 3 die of dengue, 348 undergoing treatment

    By PTI

    KOLKATA: Three persons died of dengue in Kolkata on Monday, while 348 people were undergoing treatment in the state, officials said.

    A 33-year-old man, from Keshtopur, died at a private hospital, while another man died at NRS Medical College and Hospital, they said.

    Another 33-year-old woman died at the Infectious Diseases and Beleghata General Hospital, they added.

    The state government is yet to publish the total number of deaths caused by dengue this season.

    ALSO READ | 3,521 in 10 months: Dengue cases on the rise in Kerala

    Dengue cases have been reportedly on the rise in Kerala.

    Moreover, cases were also reported from UP, Assam and Jammu and Kashmir.

    KOLKATA: Three persons died of dengue in Kolkata on Monday, while 348 people were undergoing treatment in the state, officials said.

    A 33-year-old man, from Keshtopur, died at a private hospital, while another man died at NRS Medical College and Hospital, they said.

    Another 33-year-old woman died at the Infectious Diseases and Beleghata General Hospital, they added.

    The state government is yet to publish the total number of deaths caused by dengue this season.

    ALSO READ | 3,521 in 10 months: Dengue cases on the rise in Kerala

    Dengue cases have been reportedly on the rise in Kerala.

    Moreover, cases were also reported from UP, Assam and Jammu and Kashmir.

  • Cyclone ‘Sitrang’ likely to bring heavy rain, dampen Diwali cheer in Bengal

    By PTI

    kolkata: The southern districts of West Bengal, including Kolkata, woke up to light rain and an overcast sky on Monday as cyclone ‘Sitrang’ moved towards north Bay of Bengal, raising the likelihood of a downpour during the day and threatening to dampen Diwali festivities.

    The system is expected to make a landfall between Tinkona island and Sandwip in Bangladesh early on October 25, the Met department said. It lay centred around 430 km south of Sagar Island on Monday morning, the department said.

    Sitrang, which is likely to intensify further into a severe cyclonic storm, will bring in its wake heavy to very heavy rain and wind reaching speed of 90 to 100 kmph, gusting to 110 kmph, in the coastal districts of South 24 Parganas, North 24 Parganas and East Midnapore on Monday, the weather office said.

    It will trigger heavy to very heavy rain in North 24 Parganas and South 24 Parganas on Tuesday, it said.

    Kolkata and the adjoining districts of Howrah and Hooghly are set to experience moderate to heavy rainfall on Monday, the Met said.

    The widespread rain, expected later in the day, is likely to cast a shadow on Diwali and Kali Puja celebrations in the state.

    In Kolkata, the wind speed could reach up to 50 kmph, affecting marquees set up for Kali puja celebrations.

    The morning rain, however, could not, dampen the spirits of devotees who turned up in droves early in the day at the popular Kali temples of Kalighat, Dakshineswar and Thanthania in Kolkata.

    The weather office said that the Sunderban region in West Bengal and Bangladesh is likely to get heavily impacted by the cyclone.

    Torrential rain, accompanied by wind gusting up to 100 kmph and high tidal waves, may damage kutcha embankments and roads and disrupt power and communication lines in the region, it said.

    The deputy director general of the regional meteorological centre here, Sanjib Bandopadhyay, has said that the breach of kutcha embankments, owing to the storm surge accompanied by high astronomical tide on new moon, may lead to sea water inundation of low-lying areas.

    Tidal waves are likely to reach a height of six metres owing to the twin effect of the weather system and astronomical tide.

    A Kolkata Municipal Corporation official said steps are being taken to tackle any situation that may emerge in the metropolis owing to Sitrang.

    “All pumping stations are fully active. People living in dilapidated buildings are being shifted to local schools or community halls,” he said.

    Fishermen have been advised not to venture into the sea on October 24 and 25.

    Ferry services in Sunderbans and water-bound tourist activities at seaside resort towns of Digha, Mandarmoni, Shankarpur, Bakkhali and Sagar have also been suspended as a precautionary measure.

    kolkata: The southern districts of West Bengal, including Kolkata, woke up to light rain and an overcast sky on Monday as cyclone ‘Sitrang’ moved towards north Bay of Bengal, raising the likelihood of a downpour during the day and threatening to dampen Diwali festivities.

    The system is expected to make a landfall between Tinkona island and Sandwip in Bangladesh early on October 25, the Met department said. It lay centred around 430 km south of Sagar Island on Monday morning, the department said.

    Sitrang, which is likely to intensify further into a severe cyclonic storm, will bring in its wake heavy to very heavy rain and wind reaching speed of 90 to 100 kmph, gusting to 110 kmph, in the coastal districts of South 24 Parganas, North 24 Parganas and East Midnapore on Monday, the weather office said.

    It will trigger heavy to very heavy rain in North 24 Parganas and South 24 Parganas on Tuesday, it said.

    Kolkata and the adjoining districts of Howrah and Hooghly are set to experience moderate to heavy rainfall on Monday, the Met said.

    The widespread rain, expected later in the day, is likely to cast a shadow on Diwali and Kali Puja celebrations in the state.

    In Kolkata, the wind speed could reach up to 50 kmph, affecting marquees set up for Kali puja celebrations.

    The morning rain, however, could not, dampen the spirits of devotees who turned up in droves early in the day at the popular Kali temples of Kalighat, Dakshineswar and Thanthania in Kolkata.

    The weather office said that the Sunderban region in West Bengal and Bangladesh is likely to get heavily impacted by the cyclone.

    Torrential rain, accompanied by wind gusting up to 100 kmph and high tidal waves, may damage kutcha embankments and roads and disrupt power and communication lines in the region, it said.

    The deputy director general of the regional meteorological centre here, Sanjib Bandopadhyay, has said that the breach of kutcha embankments, owing to the storm surge accompanied by high astronomical tide on new moon, may lead to sea water inundation of low-lying areas.

    Tidal waves are likely to reach a height of six metres owing to the twin effect of the weather system and astronomical tide.

    A Kolkata Municipal Corporation official said steps are being taken to tackle any situation that may emerge in the metropolis owing to Sitrang.

    “All pumping stations are fully active. People living in dilapidated buildings are being shifted to local schools or community halls,” he said.

    Fishermen have been advised not to venture into the sea on October 24 and 25.

    Ferry services in Sunderbans and water-bound tourist activities at seaside resort towns of Digha, Mandarmoni, Shankarpur, Bakkhali and Sagar have also been suspended as a precautionary measure.

  • Kolkata Diary: BJP Bengal to invite Amit Shah for Diwali 

    Express News Service

    BJP Bengal to invite Amit Shah for Diwali BJP Bengal chapter is desperate to invite Union Home minister Amit Shah to the state during Diwali or Kali Puja this month. Having missed a political opportunity during Durga Puja, the state’s saffron camp is now working hard to bring Shah to Bengal during Diwali. Earlier, ahead of the Bengal’s biggest festival, the state chapter of the saffron camp failed to send a proposed schedule for Shah. A section of party leaders then mounted pressure on the state functionaries to bring Shah for the upcoming Diwali festival. But sources in the BJP said chances of Shah’s Bengal visit in Diwali are unlikely. 

    Ensure green and noiseless Diwali: HC A division bench of Calcutta High Court directed the police and state pollution control board along with union government organisations – National Environmental Engineering Research Institute (NEERI) and Petroleum and Explosives Safety Organisation (PESO) – to jointly monitor to ensure only green fireworks are burst during the upcoming Diwali festival. The bench asked the pollution control board and the state to submit a report and fixed the next hearing date after the Court’s Puja vacation ends. The directive was issued in response to a PIL moved by Sabuj Mancha, an environment platform, in 2021. 

    Jadavpur alumni in US to raise funds for labs A group of former students of Jadavpur University (JU) in the US, who have been raising funds for the maintenance of the university’s laboratories, used the occasion of Durga Puja being held in the Bay Area in California to disseminate the message about the Global Jadavpur University Alumni Foundation (GJUAF). The foundation works as a platform to raise resources for the university. The foundation is aiming to raise 100,000 USD by November to support their alma matter which is facing acute fund crunch. Recently, JU’s V-C Suranjan Das had said the institute needs funds to overhaul its infrastructure.

    Pranab mondal Our correspondent in West [email protected]

    BJP Bengal to invite Amit Shah for Diwali 
    BJP Bengal chapter is desperate to invite Union Home minister Amit Shah to the state during Diwali or Kali Puja this month. Having missed a political opportunity during Durga Puja, the state’s saffron camp is now working hard to bring Shah to Bengal during Diwali. Earlier, ahead of the Bengal’s biggest festival, the state chapter of the saffron camp failed to send a proposed schedule for Shah. A section of party leaders then mounted pressure on the state functionaries to bring Shah for the upcoming Diwali festival. But sources in the BJP said chances of Shah’s Bengal visit in Diwali are unlikely. 

    Ensure green and noiseless Diwali: HC 
    A division bench of Calcutta High Court directed the police and state pollution control board along with union government organisations – National Environmental Engineering Research Institute (NEERI) and Petroleum and Explosives Safety Organisation (PESO) – to jointly monitor to ensure only green fireworks are burst during the upcoming Diwali festival. The bench asked the pollution control board and the state to submit a report and fixed the next hearing date after the Court’s Puja vacation ends. The directive was issued in response to a PIL moved by Sabuj Mancha, an environment platform, in 2021. 

    Jadavpur alumni in US to raise funds for labs 
    A group of former students of Jadavpur University (JU) in the US, who have been raising funds for the maintenance of the university’s laboratories, used the occasion of Durga Puja being held in the Bay Area in California to disseminate the message about the Global Jadavpur University Alumni Foundation (GJUAF). The foundation works as a platform to raise resources for the university. The foundation is aiming to raise 100,000 USD by November to support their alma matter which is facing acute fund crunch. Recently, JU’s V-C Suranjan Das had said the institute needs funds to overhaul its infrastructure.

    Pranab mondal 
    Our correspondent in West Bengal
    [email protected]

  • Kolkata: Rain dampens Puja spirit, downpour likely for next 2 days

    Express News Service

    KOLKATA:  Cloudy sky and spells of downpour in Kolkata and its adjoining districts dampened the festive mood of pandal hoppers on Saptami on Sunday. Worse, the meteorological department has predicted rainfall till October 4, Nabami, with heavy rain likely to place in some districts. Braving the overcast sky, some Puja revellers thronged the streets of Kolkata from the morning to avoid massive crowd at night. However, they were disappointed as sporadic rain drenched the city. 

    “After Covid-19 in the last two years, footfall in all major puja pandals is likely to be huge this year. There will be huge crowd after evening and visiting popular pujas will be tough. So we left home in the morning. But our plan did not work as we got stranded because of rain,’’ said Mousumi Karmakar, who took refuge under the shed of a bus stop when she was heading to a pandal in south Kolkata.

    Festive mood returned to Bengal and Kolkata after two years as strict restrictions were imposed on the biggest festival because of pandemic. This year, Puja organisers showcased their theme-based creativity, ranging from plight of acid-attack victims to social harmony and equality.

    Visitors experienced a sobering moment as they stepped into the pandal of Santoshpur Avenue South Club, which mirrored the pain of acid attack victims. The organisers decided to showcase such a stark slice of reality as the attack on women had been nudging them to think beyond bright lights, pretty idols and beautiful pandals.

    ’The theme is heart wrenching. It reminds us about the evils in our society. The organisers showed their social responsibility through the theme,’’ said Sayantika Banerjee, one of the visitors. Elaborating on what inspired him to select the theme, artist Papai Santra said, ‘’The girlfriend of a friend’s brother had suffered such an attack. Despite his parents’ objection, the guy married her. In last year’s puja, a daughter was born to them. I owe the idea and the inspiration to them.’

    Tarun Sangha in Dum Dum Park has send out a message of social harmony. The theme of the pandal is a journey, which united all fellow travellers for that length of time, irrespective of caste, creed, social status or the destination they are heading for. 

    KOLKATA:  Cloudy sky and spells of downpour in Kolkata and its adjoining districts dampened the festive mood of pandal hoppers on Saptami on Sunday. Worse, the meteorological department has predicted rainfall till October 4, Nabami, with heavy rain likely to place in some districts. Braving the overcast sky, some Puja revellers thronged the streets of Kolkata from the morning to avoid massive crowd at night. However, they were disappointed as sporadic rain drenched the city. 

    “After Covid-19 in the last two years, footfall in all major puja pandals is likely to be huge this year. There will be huge crowd after evening and visiting popular pujas will be tough. So we left home in the morning. But our plan did not work as we got stranded because of rain,’’ said Mousumi Karmakar, who took refuge under the shed of a bus stop when she was heading to a pandal in south Kolkata.

    Festive mood returned to Bengal and Kolkata after two years as strict restrictions were imposed on the biggest festival because of pandemic. This year, Puja organisers showcased their theme-based creativity, ranging from plight of acid-attack victims to social harmony and equality.

    Visitors experienced a sobering moment as they stepped into the pandal of Santoshpur Avenue South Club, which mirrored the pain of acid attack victims. The organisers decided to showcase such a stark slice of reality as the attack on women had been nudging them to think beyond bright lights, pretty idols and beautiful pandals.

    ’The theme is heart wrenching. It reminds us about the evils in our society. The organisers showed their social responsibility through the theme,’’ said Sayantika Banerjee, one of the visitors. Elaborating on what inspired him to select the theme, artist Papai Santra said, ‘’The girlfriend of a friend’s brother had suffered such an attack. Despite his parents’ objection, the guy married her. In last year’s puja, a daughter was born to them. I owe the idea and the inspiration to them.’

    Tarun Sangha in Dum Dum Park has send out a message of social harmony. The theme of the pandal is a journey, which united all fellow travellers for that length of time, irrespective of caste, creed, social status or the destination they are heading for. 

  • Baghbazar’s Durga: Goddess of freedom movement

    By PTI

    KOLKATA: The drums rolled and the colourfully dressed crowds milled as the 28-feet-high Durga idol decked in traditional ‘Daker Saaj’ towered over a park, dotted with stalls selling everything from Ashirwad atta to Kwality ice-cream, in north Kolkata, at a stone’s throw from the Baghbazar jetty.

    This is Baghbazar Sarbojanin, the oldest community Durga Puja in the megapolis, known for its carnival-like atmosphere during the five days of worship of the Goddess.

    The annual puja festivities were started here in October 1919, and within a decade, Durga worship in the municipal park became a vehicle for spreading the message of ‘Swadeshi’ by selling ‘Made in India’ products, with freedom fighters including the redoubtable Netaji Subhash Chandra Bose joining in.

    “Earlier big landlords and merchant princes used to organise Durga Puja at their homes but common people often found they were shut out of parts of it, especially if English patrons were invited. So, people in this area got together 104 years ago to start the city’s first community Durga Puja at 55, Baghbazar Street,” said Abhoy Bhattacharya, 77-year-old vice president of the puja committee.

    As the puja became popular, it shifted out from the original site to open spaces which were bigger and could accommodate more people.

    At the same time in the 1920s, social reformer Nagendra Nath Ghoshal and ‘Swadeshi’ activists such as Hem Mukherjee, Durga Charan Banerjee and Chuni Lal Chatterjee joined the puja committee.

    “They approached Subhas Chandra Bose, who was then general secretary of the Congress and CEO of Calcutta Municipal Corporation, and he allotted the current site of the puja – a huge park — officially to us in 1928. From 1929 onwards, Baghbazar Sarbojanin started the Swadeshi Mela to coincide with Durga Puja, at Bose’s suggestion. This was a way to popularise ‘Swadeshi’ products such as locally-made matches, textiles, ink, paper, machinery, medicines, etc., as opposed to Lancaster or Manchester-made products which were ruling the Indian markets,” said Bhattacharya.

    The use of the Mother Goddess imagery and worship to gender imagine the motherland and bring in feelings of nationalism among the masses had started with author Bankim Chandra Chattopadhyay and was continued in the 20th century by both armed revolutionaries of the Anushilan Samiti and Jugantar party as well as non-violent Congress workers.

    IN PHOTOS | Kolkata kicks off Durga Puja 2022 celebrations in full spirit

    “Bankim babu fathered the idea of using gender imagining of the motherland in the 19th century and this was picked up by nationalists afterwards. The use of the festivities to get messaging across to the common people was an obvious extension,” said Professor Maroona Murmu, head of the Department of History at Jadavpur University.

    However, Murmu added that ideologues such as Rabindra Nath Tagore soon pointed out to leaders like Bose that “the mother worship imagery was alienating Muslims” and attempts were made to bring them into the fold.

    Luckily, the Muslim community as well as many others had been involved in the Baghbazar puja from the start itself and the tradition has since only been reinforced.

    “People from the ‘Mikiri Patti’ (fishermen’s locality) and Muslim drivers from the coachmen’s ‘bustee’ (slum) had always played an important part in the puja here and the Swadeshi leadership insisted that this must continue. I can proudly say they are still as involved as their forefathers. We are in the true sense a ‘Sarbojanin’ (for everyone) puja,” said Bhattacharya.

    Aditya Mukherjee, a well-known professor of contemporary history and author of several books on India’s freedom struggle explained, “Since Tilak’s time, Indian nationalists have used popular festivals such as Ganesh Chaturthi and Durga Puja and iconography associated with the motherland to popularise their messaging.”

    “But this appropriation was not intended to promote religion and conscious attempts were made to use them as ‘all religion-supported events’. The tradition continues in Kolkata where we even have Durga seated in a marquee copy of St.Peter’s Basilica,” he added.

    The Goddess idol at Baghbazar has always been a traditional one, ‘ek chala’ (in one platform) with ‘Daker Saaj’ (literally décor sent by post, in reality made of silver foil).

    “The same Pal family of clay sculptors has been making our Durga for the last 70 years,” said Soumendra Lal (Raja) Kar, a life member of the puja committee.

    As the ‘dhaaks’ (drums) continued playing and more people entered the park to see the Goddess and be part of the carnival of colours, history, tradition and commerce meshed into one single stream of endless heads, under the watchful eyes of the Goddess of Baghbazar and of the freedom movement.

    KOLKATA: The drums rolled and the colourfully dressed crowds milled as the 28-feet-high Durga idol decked in traditional ‘Daker Saaj’ towered over a park, dotted with stalls selling everything from Ashirwad atta to Kwality ice-cream, in north Kolkata, at a stone’s throw from the Baghbazar jetty.

    This is Baghbazar Sarbojanin, the oldest community Durga Puja in the megapolis, known for its carnival-like atmosphere during the five days of worship of the Goddess.

    The annual puja festivities were started here in October 1919, and within a decade, Durga worship in the municipal park became a vehicle for spreading the message of ‘Swadeshi’ by selling ‘Made in India’ products, with freedom fighters including the redoubtable Netaji Subhash Chandra Bose joining in.

    “Earlier big landlords and merchant princes used to organise Durga Puja at their homes but common people often found they were shut out of parts of it, especially if English patrons were invited. So, people in this area got together 104 years ago to start the city’s first community Durga Puja at 55, Baghbazar Street,” said Abhoy Bhattacharya, 77-year-old vice president of the puja committee.

    As the puja became popular, it shifted out from the original site to open spaces which were bigger and could accommodate more people.

    At the same time in the 1920s, social reformer Nagendra Nath Ghoshal and ‘Swadeshi’ activists such as Hem Mukherjee, Durga Charan Banerjee and Chuni Lal Chatterjee joined the puja committee.

    “They approached Subhas Chandra Bose, who was then general secretary of the Congress and CEO of Calcutta Municipal Corporation, and he allotted the current site of the puja – a huge park — officially to us in 1928. From 1929 onwards, Baghbazar Sarbojanin started the Swadeshi Mela to coincide with Durga Puja, at Bose’s suggestion. This was a way to popularise ‘Swadeshi’ products such as locally-made matches, textiles, ink, paper, machinery, medicines, etc., as opposed to Lancaster or Manchester-made products which were ruling the Indian markets,” said Bhattacharya.

    The use of the Mother Goddess imagery and worship to gender imagine the motherland and bring in feelings of nationalism among the masses had started with author Bankim Chandra Chattopadhyay and was continued in the 20th century by both armed revolutionaries of the Anushilan Samiti and Jugantar party as well as non-violent Congress workers.

    IN PHOTOS | Kolkata kicks off Durga Puja 2022 celebrations in full spirit

    “Bankim babu fathered the idea of using gender imagining of the motherland in the 19th century and this was picked up by nationalists afterwards. The use of the festivities to get messaging across to the common people was an obvious extension,” said Professor Maroona Murmu, head of the Department of History at Jadavpur University.

    However, Murmu added that ideologues such as Rabindra Nath Tagore soon pointed out to leaders like Bose that “the mother worship imagery was alienating Muslims” and attempts were made to bring them into the fold.

    Luckily, the Muslim community as well as many others had been involved in the Baghbazar puja from the start itself and the tradition has since only been reinforced.

    “People from the ‘Mikiri Patti’ (fishermen’s locality) and Muslim drivers from the coachmen’s ‘bustee’ (slum) had always played an important part in the puja here and the Swadeshi leadership insisted that this must continue. I can proudly say they are still as involved as their forefathers. We are in the true sense a ‘Sarbojanin’ (for everyone) puja,” said Bhattacharya.

    Aditya Mukherjee, a well-known professor of contemporary history and author of several books on India’s freedom struggle explained, “Since Tilak’s time, Indian nationalists have used popular festivals such as Ganesh Chaturthi and Durga Puja and iconography associated with the motherland to popularise their messaging.”

    “But this appropriation was not intended to promote religion and conscious attempts were made to use them as ‘all religion-supported events’. The tradition continues in Kolkata where we even have Durga seated in a marquee copy of St.Peter’s Basilica,” he added.

    The Goddess idol at Baghbazar has always been a traditional one, ‘ek chala’ (in one platform) with ‘Daker Saaj’ (literally décor sent by post, in reality made of silver foil).

    “The same Pal family of clay sculptors has been making our Durga for the last 70 years,” said Soumendra Lal (Raja) Kar, a life member of the puja committee.

    As the ‘dhaaks’ (drums) continued playing and more people entered the park to see the Goddess and be part of the carnival of colours, history, tradition and commerce meshed into one single stream of endless heads, under the watchful eyes of the Goddess of Baghbazar and of the freedom movement.

  • Veteran Bengali film director Tarun Majumdar dead

    By PTI

    KOLKATA: Acclaimed film director Tarun Majumdar, who is known for making movies based on compelling tales highlighting the life of middle-class families, died in a Kolkata hospital on Monday following prolonged illness, hospital authorities said.

    He was 92. Majumdar was admitted to the state-run SSKM Hospital on June 14 with old age ailments and kidney problems. “Tarun Majumdar passed away at around 11.17 AM today. He has been critical for some time and his condition deteriorated further this morning. His heart beat and pulse rate had dropped and he had stopped responding to any treatment,” an official of the hospital said.

    Majumdar had developed “secondary infection in his lungs” following which he was shifted to the ICU on Sunday where he was put on ventilator, the official said. West Bengal Chief Minister Mamata Banerjee expressed deep grief over the death of Majumdar and described his passing away as a “big loss to the entertainment world”.

    She extended her condolences to Majumdar’s family members and innumerable fans. Notable among his works are ‘Kancher Swarga’ (1962), ‘Palatak’ (1963), ‘Kuheli’ (1971), Shriman Prithviraj (1972), ‘Balika Badhu’ (1976), ‘Thagini’ (1974), ‘Ganadevata’ (1978), Dadar Kirti (1980), ‘Bhalobasa Bhalobasa’ (1986). Majumdar, who received Padma Shri in 1990, has five Filmfare awards to his credit.

  • BJP activists demonstrate before Raj Bhavan demanding President Rule in Bengal

    By PTI

    KOLKATA: A group of BJP workers on Tuesday demonstrated before Raj Bhavan here to demand the imposition of President’s Rule in the state citing the “collapse of law and order” in the state.

    About 20 demonstrators, led by BJP leader and councillor of Kolkata Municipal Corporation Sajal Ghosh, raised slogans ‘ei Trinamool aar noy’ (not this TMC-run government anymore), obilombe Rastrapatir Sashon jari korte hobey'(demand immediate imposition of President’s Rule), and also tried to squat on the road in front of the Main Gate of the Raj Bhavan before they were removed from the spot.

    The activists staged the agitation in front of the Raj Bhavan despite the issuance of Section 144 of the Criminal Procedure Code in the high-security area.

    “From Anis Khan murder to the incident at Bogtui where nine people were burnt to death, gang rape and death of a 14-year- old girl in Hanskhali to the attack on Ram Navami processionists in Howrah, this government under Mamata Banerjee has miserably failed to prevent such incidents,” Ghosh claimed.

    Demanding Governor Jagdeep Dhankhar’s intervention, Ghosh said “Article 365 should be immediately promulgated in West Bengal to put an end to this lawlessness”.

    Under Article 365 of the Constitution, if a state government is unable to function according to Constitutional provisions, the Centre can take direct control of the State machinery.

    A police officer said around 20 BJP activists were taken to Lalbazar, Kolkata Police headquarters, for violating prohibitory orders. They were, however, released on personal bond.

    Trinamool Congress state spokesperson Kunal Ghosh said “the BJP is yet to accept its humiliating defeat in the last assembly polls and is now conspiring against a democratically elected government.” However, the game plan of the saffron party will not succeed, he added.

  • Birbhum killings: 4 arrested from Mumbai brought to Kolkata

    By PTI

    KOLKATA: The four people arrested from Mumbai in connection with the Birbhum killings were brought back to Kolkata on Friday morning by the CBI, an official said.

    They were brought back to Kolkata on transit remand, granted by a Mumbai court till April 10, he said. “We will be taking them to Rampurhat later in the day to speed up the investigation. They will be grilled along with other accused arrested there,” the official said.

    The CBI on Thursday arrested the four persons — Bappa, Shabu, Taj Mohammad and Serajul — from Mumbai where they fled to following the massacre in Rampurhat’s Bogtui village on March 21.

    These were the first arrests made by the central agency after taking over the probe. Nine people died of burn injuries after their houses in Bogtui were allegedly firebombed following the murder of local TMC leader Bhadu Sheikh.

    The CBI took over the investigation of the case, following an order of the Calcutta High Court. The agency at present has the custody of at least 10 people who were arrested by the police in connection with the killings. Among them is then TMC block president Anarul Hossain.

  • Kolkata Diary: All that is happenign in the ‘City of Joy’

    Express News Service

    More IIT-Kharagpur students want online exam, finds survey

    Close to 98 per cent students of IIT Kharagpur, most of whom are present on the campus, have now expressed desire to write the end-semester exams online, said an official. Last week after the institute gave the students, other than those in undergraduate first year, option to choose how they would like to write the end-semester exams following protests over forcing students to write the exams online.

    A total of 7,899 out of 8,069 said they would write the exams online. The IIT decided to give the option after  after an open-house session between institute director V K Tewari and 8,000 odd students on March 21, over the protests which the IIT witnessed.

    Garden Reach Shipbuilders and Engineers, BRO ink deal for strategic bridges

    To further its strides in facilitating road development in difficult terrains in India, Garden Reach Shipbuilders and Engineers Ltd, (GRSE) has signed an MoU with the Border Roads Organisation (BRO) for the fabrication, supply, erection and launching of first-of-its-kind,  double-lane Class 70 modular steel bridges in border areas.

    The two year contract worth Rs 65 crore was inked by the Director General of the BRO, Lt Gen Rajeev Chaudhary and Cmde PR Hari, IN (Retd.), officiating chairman & managing director, of the Miniratna Category 1 Defence PSU.

    These bridges have been designed in-house by GRSE & all components have been manufactured with 100 per cent indigenous raw materials, in line with India’s Aatmanirbhar Bharat Abhiyaan.

    254 cancer beds inaugurated at Tata Medical Center

    Kolkata got 254 new cancer beds at the Tata Medical Center in Rajarhat on Saturday. The beds, a percentage of which is reserved for underprivileged patients, are in the Tata Medical Center Phase-II. Indian Oil Corporation is also a part of the second phase development of the hospital.

    Tens of thousands of cancer patients from Bengal go to other states for treatment because Kolkata does not have enough cancer beds and facilities. Data by the ICMR-National Centre for Disease Informatics and Research suggest that in 2020 alone 1.08 lakh new cancer cases were reported in Bengal.

    Bidhannagar Municipal Corporation​ to survey for illegal billboards

    Officials will identify illegal billboards in a survey to be carried out across Salt Lake, places off the VIP Road and parts of Rajarhat to, said sources at the Bidhannagar Municipal Corporation. The recently passed budget of the civic body has set a target to mop up around Rs 65 lakh in revenue from outdoor advertisements.

    “These are high visibility areas but our revenue from the billboards from these places has been low. We want to change this,” said an official of the civic body. Once the survey is over, notices will be sent to billboard owners who have not been paying tax.

  • BJP nominates MLA Agnimitra Paul against Shatrughan Sinha of TMC for Asansol LS by-poll

    By PTI

    KOLKATA: The BJP on Friday named fashion designer turned MLA Agnimitra Paul as the party candidate for the by-election to the Asansol Lok Sabha constituency to contest against Shatrughan Sinha of the Trinamool Congress.

    For the by-poll to Ballygunje assembly seat in Kolkata, the BJP’s women’s wing leader Keya Ghosh, a known face in television panel discussions, has been nominated as the party candidate. She was pitted against former union minister and TMC candidate Babul Supriyo.

    The names were announced by the BJP central leadership in Delhi, the party’s West Bengal spokesperson Samik Bhattacharya told PTI. By-polls in both seats will be held on April 12 and votes will be counted on April 16.

    Paul had been elected to the state assembly from the Asansol South seat in Paschim Bardhaman district last year on BJP ticket.

    TMC supremo Mamata Banerjee nominated actor turned politician Shatrughan Sinha to contest from the industrial city of Asansol having a sizeable Hindi speaking population.

    The Left Front fielded senior CPI(M) leader Partha Mukherjee as the candidate for the by-election in the Asansol Lok Sabha seat. It named Saira Shah Halim of the CPI(M) as its candidate for the bypoll in the Ballygunge assembly seat. She is a known face on prime time debate shows on national news channels.

    The bypoll to Asansol was necessitated as Supriyo resigned as the BJP MP after joining the TMC in September last year.

    The Ballygunge Assembly seat is going to the by-election as incumbent MLA and state minister Subrata Mukherjee died in November 2021. Paul could not be contacted for her comment as she did not reply to calls and text messages.

    Keya Ghosh alleged that Supriyo had acted in the most unethical manner by switching loyalties. “Besides fighting against the TMC’s misrule and attack on democracy, my job will be to unmask Supriyo. He will be defeated in the by-poll,” she added.