Hindustan Times (Lucknow)

TMC reaches out to Hindu pilgrims with insurance

State govt’s move seen as an attempt to counter BJP’s charges of minority appeasemen­t

- Sumanta Ray Chaudhuri sumanta.chaudhuri@hindustant­imes.com

KOLKATA: The Trinamool Congress (TMC) government in West Bengal has announced attractive sops for pilgrims attending the upcoming Gangasagar fair in an apparent attempt to reach out to Hindu voters and counter the BJP’s charges of alleged minority appeasemen­t.

Addressing a high-level meeting held at the state secretaria­t on Friday, chief minister Mamata Banerjee announced that pilgrims coming to Gangasagar next year will be covered by life insurance amounting to ₹5 lakh each. The premium in this regard will be borne entirely by the state.

Around five to six lakh attend the Gangasagar fair on the occasion of Makar Sankranti at the confluence of the Ganges at Sagra Islands in South 24 Parganas district. It is scheduled for the second week of January.

This decision is being viewed as a direct attempt by the state government to counter BJP propaganda that the ₹10 lakh compensati­on recently announced for deceased Haj pilgrims was nothing but minority appeasemen­t. Bengal panchayat affairs and rural developmen­t minister Subrata Mukherjee, who was present at the meeting, confirmed the decision.

“Never before has any state government announced such a huge compensati­on for a fair attended by so many lakhs of people. The first thing our government did after coming to power in 2011 was discard the tourism tax that the erstwhile Left Front government used to charge. And now, we have announced such a huge insurance cover (for Hindu pilgrims),” he told HT.

Several deaths – caused mostly due to stampedes, sinking boats, fire and the cold – are reported from Gangasagar every year. The death of six pilgrims during this year’s edition of the fair resulted in a verbal battle between the Union and state government­s.

While the Narendra Modi government at the Centre claimed that the pilgrims died in a stampede, the Bengal administra­tion maintained that they occurred due to age-related ailments and the cold. As tempers rose, the state government even termed the ex-gratia compensati­on announced by the Prime Minister for the deceased’s families as an “attack on the federal structure” of the country. The BJP, as expected, was not impressed with the announceme­nt.

Terming the state government’s decision as a desperate attempt to cover up its “Muslim appeasemen­t policy”, BJP national secretary Rahul Sinha said, “This is obviously the fallout of the six deaths that occurred at the Gangasagar fair in January. But, more than that, the chief minister is starting to feel that her appeasemen­t policy is sending out negative signals to the masses.”

 ?? AFP FILE ?? ▪ Devotees at the Gangasagar fair in Sagara Islands, in January this year. The death of six pilgrims during this year’s fair resulted in a verbal battle between the Union and state government­s
AFP FILE ▪ Devotees at the Gangasagar fair in Sagara Islands, in January this year. The death of six pilgrims during this year’s fair resulted in a verbal battle between the Union and state government­s

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