Hindustan Times (Amritsar)

Setback to Mamata as Calcutta HC lifts ban on idol immersion

ORDER Court asks cops to ensure separate routes for Durga Puja, Muharram procession­s

- Avijit Ghosal and Sumanta Ray Chaudhuri letters@hindustant­imes.com With agency inputs

Someone can slit my throat, I will not succumb to conspiracy... If anything happens it will be responsibi­lity of the conspirato­rs MAMATA BANERJEE, after the verdict

KOLKATA: The Calcutta high court on Thursday put on hold a West Bengal government order that banned immersion of Durga idols during Muharram and also asked for adequate security arrangemen­ts to avoid a communal flare-up.

Terming the government’s directive as arbitrary, a division bench of acting chief justice Rakesh Tiwari and justice Harish Tandon asked police to designate separate routes for Durga Puja and Muharram procession­s, allowing immersions on September 30 (Dashami) and on October 1 (Muharram).

“The police have to take immediate steps to ensure law and order if there are indication­s of trouble,” the court’s interim order said, asking state’s top police officers to maintain law and order.

Immersion of the idols marks the end of five-day Durga Puja celebratio­ns, a Hindu festival that celebrates triumph of good over evil.

Chief minister Mamata Banerjee, who is often accused by the BJP of appeasing the minority community, said if there was violence on October 1, the “conspirato­rs” would be responsibl­e.

“Someone can even slit my throat, but I will not succumb to conspiracy,” Banerjee said while inaugurati­ng a community Durga puja in south Kolkata, without referring to the high court order.

She didn’t say who the conspirato­rs were but it was seen as a veiled reference to the BJP, which said the court ordered had unmasked the state government’s communal politics. If banning immersion for a single day invited allegation­s of appeasemen­t, she was ready to face such accusation­s all her life, the mercurial chief minister said on Wednesday.

“The order has exposed those who do communal politics in the garb of secularism,” BJP general secretary Kailash Vijayvargi­ya, who is the party’s Bengal in-charge, said in New Delhi.

A bit player in Bengal, the BJP is keen to expand base in the eastern state and often takes on the ruling Trinamool Congress over what it calls its communal agenda.

The Bengal government had barred immersion of idols of the Hindu goddess after 10pm on September 30, the last day of the Durga Puja, and the next day on Muharram when Muslims take out procession­s to mourn Imam Hussain, a grandson of the Prophet Mohammad. The restrictio­ns were necessary to maintain law and order, it had said.

The court couldn’t permit arbitrary use of power by the state, justice Tiwari said when advocate general Kishore Dutta submitted the government was well within its powers to impose the restrictio­ns.

Muharram and Durga Puja dates have been clashing for two years now and in places like the state capital Kolkata, situation can get out of hand as both Hindu and Muslim communitie­s jostle for space in the city’s congested lanes.

The court’s interim directions came on three public interest litigation­s challengin­g the restrictio­ns on the immersion of idols. The court will continue to hear the case after five weeks.

West Bengal Bharatiya Janata Party (BJP) chief Dilip Ghosh said the state government’s attempts “to divide the people on religious lines and reap electoral benefits out of it” had been defeated.

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