Will the Supreme Court Hold Bengal CM and DGP Accountable for Law and Order Issues?
Synopsis
Key Takeaways
- Supreme Court has issued directives to the ECI for transparent electoral processes.
- The BJP questions accountability of Mamata Banerjee and Rajeev Kumar.
- Reports of organized violence and police complicity have emerged.
- West Bengal citizens are experiencing significant unrest.
- The situation is documented and widespread across districts.
Kolkata, Jan 20 (NationPress) In light of the Supreme Court’s recent directives to the Election Commission of India (ECI) aimed at ensuring the ongoing Special Intensive Revision (SIR) of electoral rolls in West Bengal is carried out transparently and without inconveniencing citizens, the Bharatiya Janata Party (BJP) has posed a critical question: Will the Supreme Court hold the state’s Director General of Police, Rajeev Kumar, and the administration under Chief Minister Mamata Banerjee accountable for the troubling law and order conditions in West Bengal?
The BJP’s Chief of Information Technology Cell and the party's central observer for West Bengal, Amit Malviya, made this assertion on Tuesday, highlighting that the Supreme Court had to reiterate its order to the West Bengal DGP to maintain law and order—an instruction it has had to give repeatedly.
Malviya expressed that while the apex court’s order was being documented, West Bengal was in turmoil. He raised concerns about whether the court would acknowledge the worsening law and order situation.
In his social media post on X, Malviya asserted that organized violence has broken out across various districts of West Bengal, often with the tacit approval of police forces.
He claimed that goons from the Trinamool Congress were rampant, obstructing electoral registration officers (EROs) from accepting Form-7 submissions, while the police either watched or actively participated.
Malviya particularly pointed to the Murshidabad district, known for its significant minority population, which has been in chaos for days without any resolution in sight. He emphasized that this situation is systematic, widespread, and well-documented.
“This signifies a breakdown of constitutional governance. Will the Supreme Court take action and hold the DGP and the Mamata Banerjee-led government responsible?” Malviya questioned in his statement.
He lamented that the people of West Bengal are suffering, caught between an authoritarian regime and judicial indifference.
His statement also included a summary of district-specific incidents of unrest and violence allegedly instigated by ruling party activists during the ongoing SIR process.