Hindustan Times (Delhi)

Bengal polls

-

The apex court allowed the early hearing plea and said the case would be heard by the same bench that had on Monday declined to entertain a petition by the BJP seeking judicial interferen­ce to ensure that party candidates are able to file their nomination papers.

In Kolkata, Bengal BJP leaders claimed moral victory after the Calcutta high court’s interim order. “The high court interim order proved that our contention was right,” said BJP state president Dilip Ghosh.

Tuesday was marked by a raft of developmen­ts turning on the SEC’S unpreceden­ted decision to go back on its own order issued on Monday. The BJP moved both the Calcutta high court and the Supreme Court, seeking the quashing of the SEC’S order.

On the ground, confusion prevailed in the districts when candidates went to block developmen­t and sub-divisional offices to file nomination­s after the extension of the deadline.

“The court has said the SEC will take a decision,” said Kalyan Banerjee, advocate and Lok Sabha MP of TMC after the HC order. But Banerjee also claimed the schedule of the polls cannot be changed. He also told the media that on Wednesday, when the matter would come up for hearing in the high court, he would ask how could the same party could move two different courts with the same complaint.

Word spread that SEC was unlikely to issue new orders extending date for filing of nomination­s. “The matter belongs to the domain of the State Election Commission, but I don’t think the routine of the polls will change,” said panchayat minister Subrata Mukherjee.

According to SEC’S order on late Monday evening, the filing of nomination that ended at 3 pm on Monday would have continued till 3 pm on Tuesday.

To step back from his order issued about 12 hours earlier, State Election Commission­er A K Singh wrote on Tuesday that it contained legal i nfirmities pointed out by ruling party vice president and MP Kalyan Banerjee, and the special secretary to the state government in separate letters. “The situation has become grimly ridiculous. On Monday night, SEC issues order for extending nomination, only to turn it down next morning. In the afternoon, the Calcutta high court issue interim stay on the order rescinding Monday’s order. The poll panel has become almost a stooge of the government,” said leader of the Left parties in Bengal assembly Sujan Chakrabort­y.

of violence allegedly took place on Tuesday too. Firoza Begam, the Congress MLA from Raninagar in Murshidaba­d district, was dragged out of her car and beaten. With blood stains on her neck, the MLA sat on the road in protest. Her car was also damaged.

The rural polls have grabbed headlines since filing of nomination­s began on April 2 with all the opposition parties alleging that Trinamool supporters were preventing their candidates from filing their forms.

Incidents

In Beyond The News published on page 7 of the edition dated April 8, the last name of the lawmaker from Bahraich should have been spelt Phoole. It should also have said Yashwant Singh’s letter to PM Narendra Modi emerged on Saturday and that Etawah’s Dalit-muslim vote share is about 30%.

In a Page 1 story in the April 10 edition of Hindustan Times, headlined ‘Row over Tytler, Sajjan at Cong’s ‘harmony’ fast’, the photo caption is incorrect. The Congress leader in the picture is Rajya Sabha MP Sanjay Singh, and not former Lok Sabha MP Sajjan Kumar. The error is regretted.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from India