Tag: West Bengal

  • TMC chief Mamata Banerjee takes oath as West Bengal CM for third time in a row

    By PTI
    KOLKATA: TMC supremo Mamata Banerjee was Wednesday sworn-in as the chief minister of West Bengal for the third consecutive term after securing a massive mandate, and vowed to not “give respite” to those behind political violence sweeping the state since the election results were announced.

    Governor Jagdeep Dhankhar administered her the oath of office and secrecy at a low-key ceremony at Raj Bhavan held amid the raging COVID pandemic.

    Banerjee took the oath in Bengali language.

    She is the 21st chief minister of West Bengal and 8th person to hold the office.

    The oath-taking ceremony was held even as the BJP, which has emerged as the main opposition party in the state, held a protest at its Hastings office against attacks on its workers allegedly by the TMC since Sunday night.

    The party has claimed several of its workers were killed and party offices set on fire and vandalised.

    Party president J P Nadda and state unit chief Dilip Ghosh were present.

    Banerjee alone was sworn-in on Wednesday and her cabinet will be expanded with the induction of other ministers on May 9, the birth anniversary of Bengali cultural icon nobel laureate Rabindranath Tagore, TMC sources said.

    “Our first priority is to control the COVID situation,” she said after taking the oath.

    ALSO READ: BJP’s Bengal blunders and a message that democracy is a chapati

    Banerjee said she will hold a meeting on the pandemic situation at state secretariat Nabanna soon after leaving Raj Bhavan.

    Referring to incidents of violence which have reportedly claimed the lives of several BJP and TMC workers, Banerjee said, “I will tackle law and order from today and deal with these sternly. This is my second priority.”

    “We will not give respite to anyone (perpetrators of violence), and do everything to restore law and order,” she told journalists after taking oath.

    She urged all political parties to help maintain peace and order.

    Congratulating Banerjee on assuming office for a third time, Dhankhar expressed hope and expectation that she will govern the state according to the Constitution and rule of law.

    “We are at the moment in a very difficult crisis,” Dhankhar said, adding he has brought the issue of post-poll violence to the notice of the chief minister.

    “Our first priority is to end the horrendous and senseless violence that has affected society at large. Post poll violence, if it is retributive, is antithetical to democracy,” said Dhankhar, who has repeatedly pulled up the state government over the violence and has had a running feud with Banerjee over several issues.

    The governor said he hopes that the chief minister will, on an urgent basis, take all steps to restore the rule of law and ensure that relief reaches those who have been affected, particularly women and children.

    “I would also expect from the new government a new commitment, a new approach of cooperative federalism,” he said, addressing the media after the brief oath-taking ceremony at the Throne Room, as the chief minister stood beside.

    He urged Banerjee to rise to the occasion and expressed the hope that she will do it, while contending that it is not usual for a person to get a third term in a row.

    “There are occasions when a state faces crisis, we have to rise above partisan interests,” he said, while addressing Banerjee as his sister.

    After the governor had concluded, Banerjee said she has taken charge “just now” and that the police administration was run by the Election Commission for three months.

    She said some political parties were indulging in atrocities in places where they won.

    While the BJP has accused the TMC of targeted attacks against its workers and vandalisation of its offices, the ruling party has also claimed that its supporters were attacked and killed at places where the saffron party won.

    Hinting at a change in the police administration, Banerjee said, “I will form a new set up and ensure that no one (indulging in violence) is spared.”

    The Election Commission had transferred several police officers during the election process, including the state DGP and ADG (law and order) and SPs of a number of districts.

    Banerjee claimed there was inefficiency as the police administration was not under her government for the last three months.

    Nadda, meanwhile, led another oath ceremony at the Hastings office of the BJP where its leaders vowed to protect democracy and save the people of West Bengal from the vicious cycle of political violence.

    “I am going to districts like North 24 Parganas to be by the side of our members who were at the receiving end of brutal violence not witnessed in Independent India. We want to tell the entire country about this,” Nadda said.

    Apart from senior TMC leaders like Partha Chatterjee and Subrata Mukherjee, poll strategist Prashant Kishor, who played a key role in TMC’s victory, and Banerjee MP nephew Abhishek Banerjee were present.

    Leaders of opposition parties including the BJP, the Left and the Congress did not attend the ceremony.

  • Mamata lost election from Nandigram, should not become West Bengal CM ‘ethically’: Biplab Kumar Deb

    Tripura Chief Minister Biplab Kumar Deb on Tuesday said that Trinamool Congress supremo Mamata Banerjee should not become the Chief Minister of West Bengal “ethically” as she has lost the election from Nandigram seat in the recently held state Assembly elections.

    Despite Banerjee losing the seat to BJP’s Suvendu Adhikari, who was once her close aid, the TMC registered a landslide victory in polls winning 213 seats in the 294-member West Bengal assembly.

    Addressing a press conference at the Bharatiya Janata Party (BJP) office here to protest the alleged post-poll violence in Bengal, Deb claimed that though the BJP lost the assembly election in some of the states that went to polls, its vote share increased by several times.

    “Many people have become Chief Minister without contesting the elections, but Mamata Banerjee contested and lost the election from Nandigram. People did not elect her and on this ground, ethically, she should keep herself away from the Chief Ministerial position,” he said.

    “Now Mamata Banerjee is claiming there was a conspiracy against her. If defeat is a conspiracy, then there is a conspiracy behind victory in the election,” Deb added.

    The Tripura Chief Minister further said that the post-poll violence is taking place across West Bengal after the TMC’s win and highlighted that at least five BJP workers have been killed.

    “Houses of BJP supporters are being attacked by TMC-backed goons. Party offices, houses and shops of BJP supporters are either being vandalised or being gutted in fire,” he added.

  • Supreme Court​ strikes down West Bengal law on regulating real estate, holds it unconstitutional

    By Express News Service
    NEW DELHI:  The Supreme Court on Tuesday struck down West Bengal’s law on regulating the real estate sector in the state, saying it is unconstitutional as it encroached upon the Centre’s Real Estate (Regulation and Development) Act.

    A bench of Justices D Y Chandrachud and M R Shah said the West Bengal Housing Industry Regulation Act (HIRA), 2017, is more or less identical to the Centre’s RERA, and hence repugnant to the parliament’s law. “The state law has encroached upon the domain of Parliament,” the verdict said.

    “From our analysis of RERA and WBHIRA, two fundamental features that emerge are that WBHIRA overlaps with RERA and is copied word to word and it does not complement RERA. Both the statutes refer to the same entry in the concurrent list,” the court said.

    “Once parliament has enacted a law on a subject, it is not open to the State legislature to enact a similar law and lift it word to word,” the court said.  “The overlap is so significant that a test of repugnance based on the identity of subject matter is established.

    West Bengal has attempted to establish a parallel regime which is not Constitutionally permissible,” the court ruled. It, however, said that homebuyers, who have purchased properties under state law, need not worry as the registration of their properties remains valid. The judgement came on a plea of ‘Forum For People’s Collective Efforts’, a homebuyers’ association

  • 14 dead in turf fight after Bengal verdict

    Express News Service
    KOLKATA:  Hours after trends showed Trinamool Congress’ landslide victory in West Bengal on Sunday, the state convulsed under post-poll violence wave from Sitalkuchi in the north to Sonarpur in South 24 Parganas that left at least 14 people dead, including two women. While the BJP claimed seven of the victims were its supporters, the Trinamool counted six of the diseased as its workers.

    Prime Minister Narendra Modi called Governor Jagdeep Dhankhar and inquired about the situation. BJP president J P Nadda met the families of the victims to express solidarity. BJP leader Kailash Vijayvargiya alleged that houses over 4,000 houses were ransacked and at least 100 shops were looted. The party also alleged that two of its booth agents were gang-raped, but there was no confirmation from the police.

    ALSO READ: Around 300-400 BJP workers entered Assam from Bengal amid post-poll violence, says Himanta Biswa Sarma

    Trinamool spokesperson Kunal Ghosh said in most of the cases, the deaths were a result of the BJP’s factionalism between old workers and turncoats. “In some places, the BJP’s provocation triggered public anger,” he claimed. A worker of the Indian Secular Force, a partner of the Left Front, was killed in Bhangar, South 24 Parganas. In Kolkata’s Kankurgachi, slain BJP worker Abhijit Sarkar’s mother alleged her son was beaten to death by Trinamool supporters.

    Shovarani Mondal, a woman in her mid-60s, was allegedly killed at Jagaddal in North 24 Parganas, when she tried to protect her BJP worker son from being dragged away. In Sitalkuchi, 19-year-old Manik Baidya was shot dead by alleged Trinamool supporters. The Trinamool alleged two of their supporters Saju Khan and Bivas Bag were beaten to death by BJP supporters in Jamalpur, East Burdwan, for shouting Jay Bangla. In Hooghly, Trinamool worker Debu Pramanik was hacked to death at his home. Another party man Ganesh Mandal was killed at Raina, East Burdwan. 

  • BJP’s ‘arrogance’ among reasons for its defeat in West Bengal polls: Shiv Sena

    By PTI
    MUMBAI: The Shiv Sena on Tuesday claimed the BJP’s ”arrogance” was among the reasons for its defeat in the West Bengal Assembly polls.

    An editorial in the Sena mouthpiece ‘Saamana’ also said the BJP’s “intolerance” was responsible for it being out of power in Maharashtra.

    The comments came days after Maharashtra BJP president Chandrakant Patil reportedly asked state NCP minister Chhagan Bhujbal to weigh his words while speaking about the saffron party.

    Bhujbal had made certain remarks about the BJP in the context of the recent West Bengal polls, where the saffron party was defeated by the Mamata Banerjee-led Trinamool Congress (TMC).

    “When did Maharashtra become so intolerant?” the editorial asked.

    After the 2019 Maharashtra Assembly polls, long-terms allies Shiv Sena and BJP parted ways over the issue of sharing the chief ministerial post.

    The Shiv Sena later tied-up with the NCP and Congress to form the state government.

    On Sunday, the TMC romped home in West Bengal, pocketing 213 of the 292 Assembly seats that went to polls, while the BJP got 77 seats.

    The editorial said Bhujbal had praised Banerjee for her resounding victory, and asked what is wrong in that.

    “The BJP’s arrogance was among the reasons for its defeat in the West Bengal Assembly polls,” the Marathi daily said.

    Due to the defeat in West Bengal, the BJP is not ready to enjoy its win in the Pandharpur Assembly bypoll in Maharashtra, the Sena said.

    In a setback to the ruling Maha Vikas Aghadi (MVA) in Maharashtra, BJP candidate Samadhan Autade on Sunday won the by-election to Pandharpur-Mangalvedha Assembly seat in Solapur by defeating his nearest NCP rival by a margin of over 3,700 votes.

    “The MVA lost the Pandharpur bypoll and everyone congratulated the BJP and the winning candidate. But, no MVA leader threatened those who congratulated the winner,” the editorial said.

  • BJP’s West Bengal electoral vote share dips

    Express News Service
    KOLKATA:  The soaring-up graph of BJP’s vote-share since 2011 in West Bengal received a jolt in 2021 Assembly elections as the saffron camp’s electoral vote share dipped from 40.7% to 38.13% secured during the 2019 Lok Sabha elections.

    By bagging 18 Lok Sabha seats two years ago, the BJP created a perception that it was coming to power in the state.

    But the party’s momentum received a massive blow as it bagged victory in only 77 Assembly seats, which falls short of 44 seats comparing to the saffron camp’s peak performance in the 2019 elections.

    In 2011, BJP had a thin vote-share of 4.06% which had jumped to more than 40% in the 2019 Lok Sabha elections.

    “Growth in our vote-share was completely because of erosion in CPI(M)’ vote bank. But in this year’s result shows the CPI(M)’s further erosion did not give us any dividend. Rather, it went in favour of the ruling Trinamool Congress. Besides, we, too, lost our strength in terms electoral stake in terms vote-share,’’ said a senior BJP leader.

    Elaborating on the possibilities behind the drop in BJP’s vote-share, the leader pointed out the party’s strategy of welcoming all TMC turncoats without scanning their background might be responsible.

    ‘’We were gaining strength in West Bengal riding anti-TMC sentiment. People were supporting us against TMC’s misrule and atrocities. When these section of electorates showing allegiance to the BJP found their tormentors in the same camp and being fielded in the Assembly elections, they decided not to support us. Rather, they possibly voted for th TMC to ensure defeat of the turncoats,’’ he explained.

    Citing another example, the leader said the saffron camp started performing impressively in Dalits dominated Junglemahal area since 2018 pandhayat elections. “But we received a jolt in the region because the TMC turncoats who were elected in local civic bodies failed to deliver,” he added. 

  • BJP claims targeted killing of workers in West Bengal, plans national dharna

    Express News Service
    KOLKATA/NEW DELHI: BJP’s West Bengal chapter alleged that party supporters and workers were being attacked after the results of the Assembly polls were announced on Sunday.

    The party has announced a nationwide dharna on May 5 against the violence, and said these protests will be held following all Covid-19 protocols.

    Pointing a finger at TMC, they alleged that six persons, including five of their party supporters, were killed in 24 hours. The Ministry of Home Affairs (MHA) has sought a report from the West Bengal government.

    “Not even 24 hours have passed and there is post-poll violence across the state. Five of our supporters have been killed and thousands of shops and houses vandalised,” said state BJP president Dilip Ghosh. The other victim was identified as a supporter of Indian Secular Force.

    The BJP also lodged a complaint with Governor Jagdeep Dhankhar. “Violence is being perpetrated in front of the police. Thousands of our supporters have become homeless,” alleged Ghosh.

    Dhankhar expressed concern and said that he has directed officials to submit a report.  He summoned the Director General of Police, Police Commissioner of Kolkata and the Additional Chief Secretary, Home, to talks. Mamata Banerjee urged her supporters not to indulge in violence.

  • Asaduddin Owaisi’s AIMIM corners with megre 0.02 per cent vote share in West Bengal

    Events such because the AIMIM and Abbas Siddiqui’s ISF, which have been seen as having the potential to deal a blow to the TMC’s minority help base, didn’t make an impression within the West Bengal meeting polls because the minorities threw their weight behind Mamata Banerjee in her high-stakes contest towards the BJP.

    The Asaduddin Owaisi-led occasion, which contested seven seats within the state polls, additionally drew a clean, cornering a megre 0.02 per cent vote share.

    AIMIM chief Asaduddin Owaisi fought solo on seven seats in Bengal. AIMIM had chosed Itahar, Jalangi, Sagardighi, Bharatpur, Malatipur, Ratua and Asansol because the seats to struggle from. Owaisi has determined to contest on seats within the sixth, seventh, and eighth section of polling, inspite of ISF becoming a member of arms with Congress-Left as an alternative of him.

  • West Bengal shuts malls, restaurants as Covid-19 cases mount

    Express News Service
    KOLKATA:  Amid a surge in Covid-19 cases, the West Bengal government on Friday ordered that all shopping malls, cinemas, gyms, spas, beauty parlors, sports complexes, swimming pools, bars, and restaurants in the state be shut for an indefinite period with immediate effect. The government has restricted the operations of other commercial establishments other than those providing essential services. 

    The government has also prohibited all social, cultural, academic, and entertainment-related gatherings.  “Bazars will remain open only during 7-10 am in the morning and 3-5 pm in the afternoon,’’ the order said. Medical shops, shops selling medical equipment, grocery, etc will function as usual.

    West Bengal recorded 17,411 fresh Covid-19 positive cases on Thursday. The state also registered its highest single-day Covid-19 deaths with 96 people succumbing to the disease, the health department said in a bulletin. Of the fresh fatalities, 28 were reported from Kolkata and 20 from North 24 Parganas district, the bulletin said. In the last 24 hours, 13,932 recoveries were registered in West Bengal. 

    Activities related to the electoral counting processes and victory rallies will be guided by the Election Commission protocols, the order said. “The restrictions will be in place till the administration reviews the situation again,” a senior official said. Any person violating these measures will be liable to be proceeded against as per the provisions of the Disaster Management Act, 2005, besides action under Section 188 of the IPC.  

    The West Bengal Council of   Higher Secondary Education (WBCHSE) on Friday said that board exams for Class 12 students, in a departure from the norm, would be held at their respective schools in June, on account of rise in Covid cases. 

  • Bengal shuts down malls, cinema halls, parlours, gyms

    By Express News Service
    KOLKATA: All shopping malls, cinema halls, gyms, spas, beauty parlours, sports complexes, swimming pools, bars, and restaurants in West Bengal shall remain closed for an indefinite period with immediate effect, an order issued by the state government on Friday said. 

    The order also restricted operations of other commercial establishments other than those dealing with essential services.

    The order also said all social, cultural, academic, and entertainment-related gatherings and congregations shall remain prohibited.  

    “Bazars/haats will remain open only during 7-10 am in the morning and 3-5 pm in the afternoon,” the order said. Essential services such as medicine and medical equipment shops, grocery, etc. will remain outside the confines of the embargo.

    Bengal on Thursday recorded 17,403 fresh Covid positive cases and 89 deaths in the past 24 hours.