Hindustan Times (Noida)

Intense, multifacet­ed campaign plays out in Bhawanipor­e

- Tanmay Chatterjee letters@hindustant­imes.com

Bhawanipor­e resident Anirban Sarkar’s (42) mornings were routine: he would go for a walk for an hour, and then have “Punjabi chai” at Balwant Singh’s Eating House. But ever since West Bengal chief minister Mamata Banerjee and her challenger, Bharatiya Janata Party’s Priyanka Tibrewal, started campaignin­g here for the forthcomin­g bypoll on September 30, the routine has become special for this sales executive.

“The popular eatery on Harish Mukherjee Road seems to be on every politician’s radar because they get to interact with voters from all background­s,” said Sarkar.

Tibrewal has been there several times. So have Trinamool Congress leaders. “On September 22, Union petroleum minister Hardeep Singh Puri came to offer prayers at Gurdwara Sant Kutiya located next door. Bhawanipor­e is often referred to as ‘mini-india’ because of its population. The constituen­cy is home to Kolkata’s oldest Sikh families as well as Gujaratis, Marwaris, Odiyas and Biharis,” said Sarkar.

The sales executive said he felt bad when Banerjee did not contest from here, her old constituen­cy, during the assembly election in March-april. “After she was defeated by the BJP’S Suvendu Adhikari in Nandigram, I somehow knew that she would contest again from Bhawanipor­e. Minister Sobhandeb Chattopadh­yay, who won the seat, resigned from the assembly to make way for her. Somehow, the campaignin­g is far more intense this time than what we saw when Chattopadh­yay was fielded,” Sarkar added.

Kuldip Singh (55), whose family has been running a car tyre business for 40 years near the century-old Jadu Babu Bazar on Asutosh Mukherjee Road, concurred. “Not a single day has passed when politician­s from both sides have not knocked on the doors of voters. The agitation

in Punjab and Haryana against the Centre’s farm laws is being highlighte­d by the TMC. Many national issues are figuring in the local election,” Singh said.

Spread over a part of the constituen­cy, Odiyapara — a neighbourh­ood that came up decades ago when plumbers and car mechanics from Odisha settled here — has seen BJP leaders making multiple trips since last week. “Sambit Patra (BJP national spokespers­on) distribute­d leaflets and said as an Odiya he closely relates to Bengali culture,” said Ramesh Behera (51), who works at a garage on Dr

Rajendra Road.

Campaignin­g has been vitriolic, with the BJP attacking Banerjee for being pro-minorities and corrupt, and the CM seeking every single vote to show the BJP its place in Bengal. Although bypolls will be held in two other constituen­cies of the state — Samserganj and Jangipur — it is Bhawanipor­e where all the action is happening.

The state Congress has decided not to field anyone in Bhawanipor­e following instructio­ns from the national leadership as an acknowledg­ement of Banerjee’s efforts to unite national and regional forces against the BJP. The Communist Party of India (Marxist) has fielded Srijib Biswas, a low-profile candidate.

But both BJP and TMC said the possibilit­y of a low turnout, a regular feature of bypolls, is not ruled out. Of the 2,06,389 voters in the constituen­cy, only 1,26,592 visited polling stations on April 26 in the state assembly elections and 784 exercised their franchise through postal ballots. TMC’S Sobhandeb Chattopadh­yay won by a margin of 28,719 votes, securing 57.71% of all votes polled, while the BJP candidate, actor Rudranil Ghosh, a debutant in politics, came second with 35.16%.

According to TMC and BJP leaders, more than 20% of the people in Bhawanipor­e are Muslims, while Sikhs and non-bengali speaking Hindus comprise around 34%. Of the eight civic body wards in this assembly segment, non-bengali speaking Hindus comprise almost half the population in three wards.

Calcutta high court lawyer Tibrewal said, “It is wrong to assume that BJP is concentrat­ing on areas that have more nonbengali voters. We are reaching out to all. I was born and brought up in Kolkata. I am a Bengali like anybody else.”

In the campaign, the BJP is highlighti­ng the post-poll violence, which, it claims, has killed 52 of its workers till September 22.

Though Banerjee won the Bhawanipor­e assembly seat in 2011 and 2016, TMC trailed the BJP in two civic wards in these polls.

“We have to ensure that Mamata Banerjee wins by a margin of at least one lakh votes,” the chief minister’s nephew and TMC national general secretary Abhishek Banerjee said at a public meeting on Sunday evening when the two campaigned together for the first time. Banerjee has entrusted eight senior party leaders and ministers to monitor the campaign in the eight municipali­ty wards.

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 ?? ?? Mamata Banerjee and Priyanka Tibrewal
Mamata Banerjee and Priyanka Tibrewal

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