Tag: Trinamool Congress

  • TMC delegation meets CEC over ‘harassment’ of Saket Gokhale

    By PTI

    NEW DELHI: A five-member TMC parliamentary delegation met the chief election commissioner on Monday and registered their protest against the arrest of party spokesperson Saket Gokhale by the Gujarat Police.

    “The delegation met the CEC over the harassment and torture of our national spokesperson. We told him that he was arrested once in Ahmedabad and a case was also lodged against him in Morbi while the model code of conduct was in force. We also said that he has been wrongly charged under Section 125 (of the Representation of the People Act) which is not attracted by what he tweeted. So, this is a case of harassment,” said TMC MP Saugata Ray after the meeting.

    He asked why the section was not raised when Chief Minister of Assam Himanta Biswa Sarma reportedly “preached and fanned communalism and hatred towards religious minorities while campaigning in the recently held assembly election in Gujarat” or against Paresh Rawal, former MP of the BJP, who “preached hatred against the Bengali community while campaigning in the run-up of Gujarat assembly election”.

    Gokhale had on December 1 tweeted a news clipping about information purportedly obtained through a Right to Information application, claiming that Prime Minister Narendra Modi’s visit to Morbi after the bridge collapse cost Rs 30 crore.

    Soon after, the Press Information Bureau tweeted a ‘fact check’, saying the information was fake.

    An FIR was registered against Gokhale on charges of forgery and printing defamatory content, and he was subsequently arrested twice.

    The TMC delegation which met the CEC also included Derek O’Brien, Kalyan Banerjee, Sukhendu Sekhar Ray and Mausam Noor.

    “We have strongly registered our protect against this and the CEC promised us he will ask for a report and take necessary action,” Saugata Ray said.

    NEW DELHI: A five-member TMC parliamentary delegation met the chief election commissioner on Monday and registered their protest against the arrest of party spokesperson Saket Gokhale by the Gujarat Police.

    “The delegation met the CEC over the harassment and torture of our national spokesperson. We told him that he was arrested once in Ahmedabad and a case was also lodged against him in Morbi while the model code of conduct was in force. We also said that he has been wrongly charged under Section 125 (of the Representation of the People Act) which is not attracted by what he tweeted. So, this is a case of harassment,” said TMC MP Saugata Ray after the meeting.

    He asked why the section was not raised when Chief Minister of Assam Himanta Biswa Sarma reportedly “preached and fanned communalism and hatred towards religious minorities while campaigning in the recently held assembly election in Gujarat” or against Paresh Rawal, former MP of the BJP, who “preached hatred against the Bengali community while campaigning in the run-up of Gujarat assembly election”.

    Gokhale had on December 1 tweeted a news clipping about information purportedly obtained through a Right to Information application, claiming that Prime Minister Narendra Modi’s visit to Morbi after the bridge collapse cost Rs 30 crore.

    Soon after, the Press Information Bureau tweeted a ‘fact check’, saying the information was fake.

    An FIR was registered against Gokhale on charges of forgery and printing defamatory content, and he was subsequently arrested twice.

    The TMC delegation which met the CEC also included Derek O’Brien, Kalyan Banerjee, Sukhendu Sekhar Ray and Mausam Noor.

    “We have strongly registered our protect against this and the CEC promised us he will ask for a report and take necessary action,” Saugata Ray said.

  • Private member’s bill on Uniform Civil Code introduced in Rajya Sabha

    By PTI

    NEW DELHI: A controversial private member’s Bill that seeks to provide for a panel to prepare a Uniform Civil Code was introduced in the Rajya Sabha on Friday.

    ‘The Uniform Civil Code in India Bill, 2020’ was introduced in the Upper House amid protests from opposition parties.

    BJP MP Kirodi Lal Meena moved for leave to introduce the Bill to provide for the constitution of the national inspection and investigation committee for preparation of a Uniform Civil Code and its implementation throughout India and for matters connected therewith during the private member’s business.

    However, Opposition members from the Congress, CPI, CPI(M), Trinamool Congress protested against the introduction of the Bill saying it will “destroy” the social fabric and unity in diversity that is prevalent in the country.

    With the Opposition members seeking withdrawal of the Bill, Rajya Sabha Chairman Jagdeep Dhankhar called for division and the motion for introduction of the Bill was passed with 63 votes in favour and 23 against it.

    In the past, although the Bill was listed for introduction, it was not moved in the Upper House. The Bill envisages a collection of laws to protect the personal rights of all citizens without considering religion.

    NEW DELHI: A controversial private member’s Bill that seeks to provide for a panel to prepare a Uniform Civil Code was introduced in the Rajya Sabha on Friday.

    ‘The Uniform Civil Code in India Bill, 2020’ was introduced in the Upper House amid protests from opposition parties.

    BJP MP Kirodi Lal Meena moved for leave to introduce the Bill to provide for the constitution of the national inspection and investigation committee for preparation of a Uniform Civil Code and its implementation throughout India and for matters connected therewith during the private member’s business.

    However, Opposition members from the Congress, CPI, CPI(M), Trinamool Congress protested against the introduction of the Bill saying it will “destroy” the social fabric and unity in diversity that is prevalent in the country.

    With the Opposition members seeking withdrawal of the Bill, Rajya Sabha Chairman Jagdeep Dhankhar called for division and the motion for introduction of the Bill was passed with 63 votes in favour and 23 against it.

    In the past, although the Bill was listed for introduction, it was not moved in the Upper House. The Bill envisages a collection of laws to protect the personal rights of all citizens without considering religion.

  • Gujarat Police arrest TMC spokesperson Saket Gokhale from airport in Rajasthan, claims party; ‘no info’, says cop

    By PTI

    NEW DELHI: The Trinamool Congress on Tuesday claimed that the Gujarat Police has arrested its spokesperson Saket Gokhale, terming it a “political vendetta”.

    In a tweet, TMC national spokesperson and Rajya Dabha MP Derek O’Brien detailed the circumstances under which the arrest was made.

    Gokhale took a flight at 9 pm from New Delhi to Jaipur on Monday. When he landed, the Gujarat Police was at the airport in Rajasthan waiting for him and picked him up.

    At 2 am on Tuesday, Gokhale called his mother and told her that the police were taking him to Ahmedabad and he would reach that city by noon, O’Brien claimed.

    “The police let him make that two-minute phone call and then confiscated his phone and all his belongings,” the TMC leader said on Twitter.

    At 2 in the morning on Tue, he called his Ma and told her that they are taking him to Ahmedabad and he would reach Ahmedabad by noon today. The police let him make that one two-minute phone call and then confiscated his phone and all his belongings. 2/3
    — Derek O’Brien | ডেরেক ও’ব্রায়েন (@derekobrienmp) December 6, 2022
    “The cooked up case is filed with the Ahmedabad cyber cell about Saket’s tweet on the Morbi bridge collapse. All this cannot silence the All India Trinamool Congress and the Opposition. BJP taking political vendetta to another level,” he alleged.

    When contacted, Jaipur airport police station SHO Digpal Singh said he had no such information.

    “I have no information. Nobody informed us,” he said.

    NEW DELHI: The Trinamool Congress on Tuesday claimed that the Gujarat Police has arrested its spokesperson Saket Gokhale, terming it a “political vendetta”.

    In a tweet, TMC national spokesperson and Rajya Dabha MP Derek O’Brien detailed the circumstances under which the arrest was made.

    Gokhale took a flight at 9 pm from New Delhi to Jaipur on Monday. When he landed, the Gujarat Police was at the airport in Rajasthan waiting for him and picked him up.

    At 2 am on Tuesday, Gokhale called his mother and told her that the police were taking him to Ahmedabad and he would reach that city by noon, O’Brien claimed.

    “The police let him make that two-minute phone call and then confiscated his phone and all his belongings,” the TMC leader said on Twitter.

    At 2 in the morning on Tue, he called his Ma and told her that they are taking him to Ahmedabad and he would reach Ahmedabad by noon today. The police let him make that one two-minute phone call and then confiscated his phone and all his belongings. 2/3
    — Derek O’Brien | ডেরেক ও’ব্রায়েন (@derekobrienmp) December 6, 2022
    “The cooked up case is filed with the Ahmedabad cyber cell about Saket’s tweet on the Morbi bridge collapse. All this cannot silence the All India Trinamool Congress and the Opposition. BJP taking political vendetta to another level,” he alleged.

    When contacted, Jaipur airport police station SHO Digpal Singh said he had no such information.

    “I have no information. Nobody informed us,” he said.

  • FIR against Suvendu for commenting on tribal minister

    By Express News Service

    KOLKATA:  Amid row over a Trinamool Congress minister’s remark aimed at President Draupadi Murmu, a tribal minister in Mamata Banerjee’s cabinet on Wednesday lodged an FIR with police against Leader of Opposition Suvendu Adhikari accusing him of outraging her modesty and disrobing her dignity.

    The complaint was made after the TMC dug out a video clip in which Adhikari was heard talking about minister Birbaha Hansda.

    In her complaint, Birbaha alleged, “I am making this instant complaint against Adhikari, the Leader of The opposition, and other unknown persons for committing unlawful and illegal acts with the objective of outraging my modesty and disrobing me of my dignity.’’

    The FIR was lodged under the Schedule castes and Scheduled Tribes (Prevention of Atrocities) Act, 1989.In the video, Adhikari was harshly commenting on Birbaha saying, “These are kids to me. Like this Birbaha. I keep them under my footwear.’’

    KOLKATA:  Amid row over a Trinamool Congress minister’s remark aimed at President Draupadi Murmu, a tribal minister in Mamata Banerjee’s cabinet on Wednesday lodged an FIR with police against Leader of Opposition Suvendu Adhikari accusing him of outraging her modesty and disrobing her dignity.

    The complaint was made after the TMC dug out a video clip in which Adhikari was heard talking about minister Birbaha Hansda.

    In her complaint, Birbaha alleged, “I am making this instant complaint against Adhikari, the Leader of 
    The opposition, and other unknown persons for committing unlawful and illegal acts with the objective of outraging my modesty and disrobing me of my dignity.’’

    The FIR was lodged under the Schedule castes and Scheduled Tribes (Prevention of Atrocities) Act, 1989.
    In the video, Adhikari was harshly commenting on Birbaha saying, “These are kids to me. Like this Birbaha. I keep them under my footwear.’’

  • Some people conspiring against Bengal, trying to defame us: Mamata

    Amid the arrests of senior party leaders in graft cases, the TMC supremo said those who have committed mistakes should be given a chance to rectify these.

  • Bengal: Onset of winter sees political temperature soaring between TMC, BJP

    By PTI

    KOLKATA:  As the cold weather approaches, the political temperature seems to be rising in Bengal amid claims and counterclaims by the opposition BJP and the ruling TMC over the stability of the Mamata Banerjee-led government.

    The month of December has assumed significance in Bengal’s political landscape over the past few months with several BJP leaders, including Leader of Opposition Suvendu Adhikari, stating on occasions that the TMC would cease to exist when the year draws to a close, an assertion that was initially rebuffed by the ruling camp.

    However, with Chief Minister Mamata Banerjee expressing concern over recent arms seizures in the state and voicing apprehension that attempts were being made to stir unrest in north Bengal, BJP’s dire warnings are now being taken seriously by some, sources in the party said.

    Demand for a separate union territory had been gaining ground in north Bengal, with several BJP leaders and local outfits asserting since last month that it was only a “matter of time.” The BJP leadership, however, has distanced itself from the remark.

    TMC spokesperson Kunal Ghosh alleged that it was evident from the BJP leaders’ statements that they were hatching a conspiracy to destabilize the state government.

    “The BJP had been seeking revenge one way or the other after its defeat in the last assembly polls. It is evident from their statements that they are hatching a conspiracy to destabilize the state government and create disturbances through various means. If any untoward incident happens in December, the BJP will be responsible for it,” Ghosh said.

    Echoing him, veteran TMC leader Sougata Roy said the BJP is “desperate to capture power” in West Bengal by hook or by crook.

    “The BJP is trying to create a December phobia to boost the morale of party workers. We have seen in Maharashtra and other states that the party can stoop to any level to seize power. They are fanning separatism and creating a financial blockade by stopping fund flow to the state,” Roy told PTI.READ | Some people conspiring against Bengal, trying to defame us: Mamata

    Adhikari had said in August that the TMC government will “cease to exist” by December, and assembly elections will be held in the state along with the Lok Sabha polls in 2024.

    Top BJP leaders, including state president Sukanta Majumdar, too had said that “unprecedented” political developments will occur in December. BJP national vice-president Dilip Ghosh, when approached, claimed that the state government is administratively and financially on a sticky wicket.

    “The way senior TMC leaders and ministers were arrested, one after another, in the last few months, shows that the entire government and the party are involved in corruption. You never know who is next. The law and order situation, too, has worsened. So we feel that the survival of the TMC government is at stake,” Ghosh stated.

    BJP spokesperson Samik Bhattacharya feels that the state is on the verge of economic collapse.

    “The TMC is facing political instability, and the economic situation in the state is awful. The TMC leaders are at each other’s throats. The survival of this government is at stake,” he told PTI.

    CPI(M) leader Sujan Chakraborty said that both the TMC and the BJP were making attempts to “create a binary to divert attention from real issues”.

    Political analysts and economists, however, feel the situation is better than what was projected by the BJP.

    “The economic situation of any state is gauged by its debt ratio and GSDP, and those figures are not alarming. After the implementation of GST, tax collection has also improved. But at the same time, populist and welfare schemes are putting pressure on the state exchequer,” economist Ajitav Rai Chaudhuri told PTI.

    Veteran political scientist Amal Mukhopadhyay claimed that “a narrative created around a month is something unprecedented in the history of Bengal politics”.

    “Never before have we seen so much hype being created around a month. I feel it’s a hoax to keep the political cauldron boiling. At present, politics in Bengal is just about mudslinging, communal polarisation and creating a narrative to stay afloat,” Mukhopadhyay, former principal of Presidency College, added.ALSO READ | MGNREGA: West Bengal’s employment drive without Centre’s fund falls flat

    KOLKATA:  As the cold weather approaches, the political temperature seems to be rising in Bengal amid claims and counterclaims by the opposition BJP and the ruling TMC over the stability of the Mamata Banerjee-led government.

    The month of December has assumed significance in Bengal’s political landscape over the past few months with several BJP leaders, including Leader of Opposition Suvendu Adhikari, stating on occasions that the TMC would cease to exist when the year draws to a close, an assertion that was initially rebuffed by the ruling camp.

    However, with Chief Minister Mamata Banerjee expressing concern over recent arms seizures in the state and voicing apprehension that attempts were being made to stir unrest in north Bengal, BJP’s dire warnings are now being taken seriously by some, sources in the party said.

    Demand for a separate union territory had been gaining ground in north Bengal, with several BJP leaders and local outfits asserting since last month that it was only a “matter of time.” The BJP leadership, however, has distanced itself from the remark.

    TMC spokesperson Kunal Ghosh alleged that it was evident from the BJP leaders’ statements that they were hatching a conspiracy to destabilize the state government.

    “The BJP had been seeking revenge one way or the other after its defeat in the last assembly polls. It is evident from their statements that they are hatching a conspiracy to destabilize the state government and create disturbances through various means. If any untoward incident happens in December, the BJP will be responsible for it,” Ghosh said.

    Echoing him, veteran TMC leader Sougata Roy said the BJP is “desperate to capture power” in West Bengal by hook or by crook.

    “The BJP is trying to create a December phobia to boost the morale of party workers. We have seen in Maharashtra and other states that the party can stoop to any level to seize power. They are fanning separatism and creating a financial blockade by stopping fund flow to the state,” Roy told PTI.READ | Some people conspiring against Bengal, trying to defame us: Mamata

    Adhikari had said in August that the TMC government will “cease to exist” by December, and assembly elections will be held in the state along with the Lok Sabha polls in 2024.

    Top BJP leaders, including state president Sukanta Majumdar, too had said that “unprecedented” political developments will occur in December. BJP national vice-president Dilip Ghosh, when approached, claimed that the state government is administratively and financially on a sticky wicket.

    “The way senior TMC leaders and ministers were arrested, one after another, in the last few months, shows that the entire government and the party are involved in corruption. You never know who is next. The law and order situation, too, has worsened. So we feel that the survival of the TMC government is at stake,” Ghosh stated.

    BJP spokesperson Samik Bhattacharya feels that the state is on the verge of economic collapse.

    “The TMC is facing political instability, and the economic situation in the state is awful. The TMC leaders are at each other’s throats. The survival of this government is at stake,” he told PTI.

    CPI(M) leader Sujan Chakraborty said that both the TMC and the BJP were making attempts to “create a binary to divert attention from real issues”.

    Political analysts and economists, however, feel the situation is better than what was projected by the BJP.

    “The economic situation of any state is gauged by its debt ratio and GSDP, and those figures are not alarming. After the implementation of GST, tax collection has also improved. But at the same time, populist and welfare schemes are putting pressure on the state exchequer,” economist Ajitav Rai Chaudhuri told PTI.

    Veteran political scientist Amal Mukhopadhyay claimed that “a narrative created around a month is something unprecedented in the history of Bengal politics”.

    “Never before have we seen so much hype being created around a month. I feel it’s a hoax to keep the political cauldron boiling. At present, politics in Bengal is just about mudslinging, communal polarisation and creating a narrative to stay afloat,” Mukhopadhyay, former principal of Presidency College, added.ALSO READ | MGNREGA: West Bengal’s employment drive without Centre’s fund falls flat

  • CAA, dengue, remarks on Prez – issues that will rock winter session of Bengal Assembly on Monday

    By IANS

    KOLKATA: With the winter session of West Bengal Assembly scheduled to commence from Monday, major ruckus is expected on the floor of the House over fracas between the ruling Trinamool Congress and the opposition BJP mainly on three major issues.

    The BJP legislators under the leadership of opposition leader Suvendu Adhikari are preparing to go all out demanding a statement from Chief Minister Mamata Banerjee on the derogatory comments made by MoS in-charge of Correctional Services Department, Akhil Giri, concerning the looks of President Droupadi Murmu.

    At a rally in Nandigram on Friday, Giri had reportedly said, “We don’t judge anyone by their appearance… We respect the office of the President. But how does our President look?”

    After facing severe criticism from different quarters, the Trinamool Congress had on Saturday censured its leader, while Giri also apologied for his comments referring to the President.

    “Despite such a derogatory statement from a minister, the Chief Minister is still silent. What does this mean? We demand immediate removal of Akhil Giri as a member of the legislative Assembly as well as a statement from the Chief Minister,” Adhikari said.

    ALSO READ | Furore in Odisha over Akhil Giri’s comment on Prez Murmu, parties unite in demand for his arrest

    The second point of fracas will be a probable motion to be brought by Trinamool Congress condemning the Citizenship Amendment Act (CAA), and the recent developments over it after the decision of the Union government to grant citizenship status to Hindus, Sikhs, Jains, Parsis and Christians coming from Pakistan, Afghanistan and Bangladesh and currently living in Gujarat’s Mehsana and Anand districts.

    BJP legislator Agnimitra Paul has said that as soon the motion is brought on the floor of the House, BJP legislators will oppose it as directed by the leader of the opposition.

    Senior Trinamool legislator Tapas Roy said that since CAA is something which is floated by the BJP before any election, just as it has been done before next month’s Assembly elections in Gujarat, Trinamool Congress has decided to oppose this drive by bringing a motion in the Assembly condemning the CAA.

    “Our party’s stand, as said by our leader Mamata Banerjee, is clear. We do not oppose granting citizenship. But that does not mean that it would be done isolating a particular community,” he said.

    The third point of fracas can be BJP trying to bring a motion condemning the state government’s failure to control dengue as well the latter’s reluctance to share related data with the Union Health Ministry.

    Urban Development & Municipal Affairs Minister, Firhad Hakim, has claimed that BJP is unnecessarily trying to politicise the issue by spreading rumours of not sharing data with the Union government.

    KOLKATA: With the winter session of West Bengal Assembly scheduled to commence from Monday, major ruckus is expected on the floor of the House over fracas between the ruling Trinamool Congress and the opposition BJP mainly on three major issues.

    The BJP legislators under the leadership of opposition leader Suvendu Adhikari are preparing to go all out demanding a statement from Chief Minister Mamata Banerjee on the derogatory comments made by MoS in-charge of Correctional Services Department, Akhil Giri, concerning the looks of President Droupadi Murmu.

    At a rally in Nandigram on Friday, Giri had reportedly said, “We don’t judge anyone by their appearance… We respect the office of the President. But how does our President look?”

    After facing severe criticism from different quarters, the Trinamool Congress had on Saturday censured its leader, while Giri also apologied for his comments referring to the President.

    “Despite such a derogatory statement from a minister, the Chief Minister is still silent. What does this mean? We demand immediate removal of Akhil Giri as a member of the legislative Assembly as well as a statement from the Chief Minister,” Adhikari said.

    ALSO READ | Furore in Odisha over Akhil Giri’s comment on Prez Murmu, parties unite in demand for his arrest

    The second point of fracas will be a probable motion to be brought by Trinamool Congress condemning the Citizenship Amendment Act (CAA), and the recent developments over it after the decision of the Union government to grant citizenship status to Hindus, Sikhs, Jains, Parsis and Christians coming from Pakistan, Afghanistan and Bangladesh and currently living in Gujarat’s Mehsana and Anand districts.

    BJP legislator Agnimitra Paul has said that as soon the motion is brought on the floor of the House, BJP legislators will oppose it as directed by the leader of the opposition.

    Senior Trinamool legislator Tapas Roy said that since CAA is something which is floated by the BJP before any election, just as it has been done before next month’s Assembly elections in Gujarat, Trinamool Congress has decided to oppose this drive by bringing a motion in the Assembly condemning the CAA.

    “Our party’s stand, as said by our leader Mamata Banerjee, is clear. We do not oppose granting citizenship. But that does not mean that it would be done isolating a particular community,” he said.

    The third point of fracas can be BJP trying to bring a motion condemning the state government’s failure to control dengue as well the latter’s reluctance to share related data with the Union Health Ministry.

    Urban Development & Municipal Affairs Minister, Firhad Hakim, has claimed that BJP is unnecessarily trying to politicise the issue by spreading rumours of not sharing data with the Union government.

  • Cattle smuggling case: CBI files chargesheet against TMC’s Anubrata in court

    By PTI

    KOLKATA: The Central Bureau of Investigation (CBI) on Friday submitted a 35-page chargesheet in a CBI court in Asansol against Trinamool Congress leader Anubrata Mondal, who was arrested by the agency in connection with a cattle smuggling case.

    Mondal, currently in judicial remand, is lodged in Asansol correctional home.

    The TMC’s Birbhum district president was arrested on August 11 from his residence at Bolpur by a team of CBI sleuths for allegedly not cooperating in its investigation into the cattle smuggling case.

    The ruling party leader had skipped appearing before the CBI officers at its Nizam Palace office for his questioning on several occasions prior to the arrest.

    KOLKATA: The Central Bureau of Investigation (CBI) on Friday submitted a 35-page chargesheet in a CBI court in Asansol against Trinamool Congress leader Anubrata Mondal, who was arrested by the agency in connection with a cattle smuggling case.

    Mondal, currently in judicial remand, is lodged in Asansol correctional home.

    The TMC’s Birbhum district president was arrested on August 11 from his residence at Bolpur by a team of CBI sleuths for allegedly not cooperating in its investigation into the cattle smuggling case.

    The ruling party leader had skipped appearing before the CBI officers at its Nizam Palace office for his questioning on several occasions prior to the arrest.

  • Need to felicitate loyal workers to ‘soothe resentment,’ says Abhishek  Banerjee

    Express News Service

    KOLKATA: In a bid to ease out disgruntlement among the loyal and old foot-soldiers of the Trinamool Congress (TMC), the party’s national general secretary Abhishek Banerjee has issued a directive for organising get-together events in every block after Dussehra to felicitate the workers at the grassroots level. 

    The instructions issued by Banerjee said that no turncoats will be on the list of those who will be felicitated. The move is said to be an effort to pacify the party’s workers who have expressed their unhappiness on several occasions over the importance given to those who joined the TMC from other parties, especially from the BJP.

    “Banerjee has asked for felicitation of at least 500 party workers in each block. They will be picked from the booth-level structure of the organisation. Only those workers who joined the party before 2011 and played key roles in the historic Assembly elections that derailed the 34-year Left Front regime in 2011 will be selected,’’ said a senior TMC leader.

    According to the directive, the felicitation events will have to be completed between October 11 and October 22 in all the 294 Assembly constituencies. ‘’Panchayat samitis or zila parishads will organise the events in the constituencies, which the TMC failed to bag in the 2021 Assembly polls. The entire felicitation event will have to be recorded on video and sent to Banerjee’s office in Kolkata,’’ the leader added.

    In the instructions, Banerjee, the second-in-command in the TMC and Chief Minister Mamata Banerjee’s nephew, made it clear that collecting contributions from common people for the programmes will not be allowed.

    “He, however, did not mention where the money for organising the events will come from,’’ another leader of the ruling party said. Rift between the old workers and newcomers in the TMC has emerged prominently on several occasions. “Banerjee’s decision of acknowledging loyal workers aims to ease out the disgruntlement among them,’’ the leader added. 

    KOLKATA: In a bid to ease out disgruntlement among the loyal and old foot-soldiers of the Trinamool Congress (TMC), the party’s national general secretary Abhishek Banerjee has issued a directive for organising get-together events in every block after Dussehra to felicitate the workers at the grassroots level. 

    The instructions issued by Banerjee said that no turncoats will be on the list of those who will be felicitated. The move is said to be an effort to pacify the party’s workers who have expressed their unhappiness on several occasions over the importance given to those who joined the TMC from other parties, especially from the BJP.

    “Banerjee has asked for felicitation of at least 500 party workers in each block. They will be picked from the booth-level structure of the organisation. Only those workers who joined the party before 2011 and played key roles in the historic Assembly elections that derailed the 34-year Left Front regime in 2011 will be selected,’’ said a senior TMC leader.

    According to the directive, the felicitation events will have to be completed between October 11 and October 22 in all the 294 Assembly constituencies. ‘’Panchayat samitis or zila parishads will organise the events in the constituencies, which the TMC failed to bag in the 2021 Assembly polls. The entire felicitation event will have to be recorded on video and sent to Banerjee’s office in Kolkata,’’ the leader added.

    In the instructions, Banerjee, the second-in-command in the TMC and Chief Minister Mamata Banerjee’s nephew, made it clear that collecting contributions from common people for the programmes will not be allowed.

    “He, however, did not mention where the money for organising the events will come from,’’ another leader of the ruling party said. Rift between the old workers and newcomers in the TMC has emerged prominently on several occasions. “Banerjee’s decision of acknowledging loyal workers aims to ease out the disgruntlement among them,’’ the leader added.
     

  • Anubrata Mondal acquitted by court in Mangalkot violence case

    By PTI

    KOLKATA: Senior Trinamool Congress leader Anubrata Mondal and 13 others were acquitted on Friday in a 2010 case of violence at Mangalkot in Birbhum district by an MP/MLA court here on Friday.

    Mondal and the 13 others were accused in the case of political violence in March, 2010, in which some people were injured.

    The judge of the MP/MLA court acquitted Mondal and the others for want of evidence.

    The prosecution could not prove from the testimonies of witnesses that the accused were present in the scene of violence, the court held.

    It was alleged that a few activists of the then ruling CPI(M) were injured in a clash with TMC supporters at a village in Mangalkot.

    Following his acquittal, Mondal claimed that he had been framed in the case.

    The TMC leader is at present in judicial custody following his arrest on August 11 by CBI in connection with the cattle smuggling case.

    KOLKATA: Senior Trinamool Congress leader Anubrata Mondal and 13 others were acquitted on Friday in a 2010 case of violence at Mangalkot in Birbhum district by an MP/MLA court here on Friday.

    Mondal and the 13 others were accused in the case of political violence in March, 2010, in which some people were injured.

    The judge of the MP/MLA court acquitted Mondal and the others for want of evidence.

    The prosecution could not prove from the testimonies of witnesses that the accused were present in the scene of violence, the court held.

    It was alleged that a few activists of the then ruling CPI(M) were injured in a clash with TMC supporters at a village in Mangalkot.

    Following his acquittal, Mondal claimed that he had been framed in the case.

    The TMC leader is at present in judicial custody following his arrest on August 11 by CBI in connection with the cattle smuggling case.