Hindustan Times (Jalandhar)

Bhangar agitators to contest polls, Didi rivals rally around

- Snigdhendu Bhattachar­ya snigdhendu.bhattachar­ya@htlive.com

KOLKATA: West Bengal chief minister Mamata Banerjee has a seemingly tiny and localised political challenger on the horizon, barely 30km east of Kolkata. However, unlike opposition parties she has demolished in elections since storming to power in 2011, her problem is this won’t be a convention­al foe.

This challenger is drawing strength from what is seen as one of her vulnerable spots — the Bhangar land agitation in South 24-Parganas district against a Power Grid Corporatio­n India Ltd project.

This is the only major land agitation in Bengal after her Trinamool Congress ended the Left Front’s 34-year rule. Incidental­ly, in the years leading up to assuming power, Mamata had ripped into the Left Front over land agitations in Nandigram and Singur. The government is treading carefully around Bhangar block and police are maintainin­g their distance from the cluster of villages opposing the project, alleging it is a health hazard and detrimenta­l to fish and crop. When the agitation started in October 2016, four villages were resisting the project. The resistance has spread to 16 villages.

A key leader of the agitation, Alik Chakrabort­y, moves around freely in Bhangar despite police booking him under the stringent Unlawful Activities (Prevention) Act. The Centre had brought the UAPA into force to curb terror and disruptive activities. Chakrabort­y shared plans of the Bhangar agitators to contest the Bengal panchayat polls in 2018. “People will take over the panchayat from Trinamool Congress,” he told HT, sipping tea at a roadside stall in the region. “The movement is also against the ruling party’s corruption and subjugatio­n of dissenting voices,” Chakrabort­y, a member of the Communist Party of India Red Star.

Backed by Chakrabort­y’s party, agitating villagers have decided to field independen­t candidates across Bhangar.

The agitators, who have galvanised under a banner named Jami, Jibika, Poribesh O Bastutantr­a Raksha Committee (JJPBRC — committee to secure land, livelihood, environmen­t and ecosystem) showcased their political intent last month. Between October 15 and 27, the JJPBRC formed branches in all 16 villages opposing the project. Each branch has between 40 and 125 members. “The committee will approve any developmen­t project a panchayat, or the government, may take up,” said Mirza Hasan, convener of JJPBRC. Questions about such an extra-constituti­onal suggestion do not bother him.

FLASHPOINT: JANUARY 17, 2017

Anti-Trinamool sentiment peaked after two villagers died during a clash between police and agitators on January 17. Villagers allege that “Trinamoolb­acked goons, mingling with the police, opened fire and killed their unarmed boys”. Police are investigat­ing the case.

Work on the project stopped after the two deaths, which also ended Trinamool leaders’ visits to many of the restive villages.

Kaiser Ahmed, a Trinamool leader of South 24-Parganas district, said, “The party’s top leadership has asked us to avoid confrontat­ion with the agitators.”

LOCALS OPPOSING A POWER SUBSTATION IN THE AREA TO FIELD INDEPENDEN­T CANDIDATES

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