Are Bengal municipalities’ recruitment funds linked to Minister Sujit Bose and his son?

Synopsis
Key Takeaways
- ED Investigation: Focus on financial sources linked to Sujit Bose.
- Raids Conducted: Extensive searches at Bose's office and son's restaurant.
- Questionable Appointments: 300 recruitments under scrutiny, many without interviews.
- Political Implications: Investigation could impact upcoming elections in West Bengal.
- CBI Involvement: Parallel probe adds pressure to the ongoing investigation.
Kolkata, Oct 11 (NationPress) The Enforcement Directorate (ED) is examining the origins of funds invested in businesses owned by West Bengal Fire Services Minister Sujit Bose and his son, Samudra Bose, as it investigates the extensive municipalities’ recruitment scandal in the state.
Sources indicate that ED officials suspect financial irregularities related to various enterprises associated with the Minister and his son from 2016 to 2020.
On Friday, the agency conducted thorough raids at Bose’s office and a restaurant operated by his son. These operations commenced early and extended past midnight, resulting in the confiscation of what officials termed as “incriminating documents” indicative of questionable funding sources.
The ED also targeted the office of Nitai Dutta, Vice-Chairman of the South Dum Dum Municipality and a close associate of Sujit Bose.
Substantial documents were reportedly retrieved from there as well. The agency is scrutinizing nearly 300 recruitments made in the South Dum Dum Municipality, including at least 29 appointments that were allegedly made in a single day without conducting any interviews.
In response to the raids, Sujit Bose labeled them as “meaningless” and a part of a “routine exercise” by central agencies ahead of elections. The West Bengal assembly polls are set to take place next year.
This is not the first instance of scrutiny for the Minister; in January 2024, the ED executed simultaneous searches at his residence and office, confiscating documents and his mobile device.
The latest actions from the ED coincide with the Central Bureau of Investigation (CBI) conducting a parallel investigation into the same case and preparing to file a new charge sheet.
According to sources from the CBI, the son of a politically influential individual has already been questioned regarding the scam, though his identity remains undisclosed.
The inquiry arises from a CBI FIR registered upon directions from the Calcutta High Court, which noted that the recruitment scam has expanded beyond school appointments to encompass municipal-level hirings throughout West Bengal.