Hindustan Times ST (Mumbai)

BJP wants media observers in ‘super-sensitive’ Bengal

- HT Correspond­ents

NEWDELHI/KOLKATA: The Bharatiya Janata Party (BJP) on Wednesday asked the election commission (EC) to declare West Bengal, where it is fighting a pitched battle against the Trinamool Congress (TMC), as a “super-sensitive state” to ensure free and fair elections.

The party also wants “independen­t media observers” sent to the state, to allow the media to function with neutrality. “The media is browbeaten in Bengal…”, law minister Ravi Shankar Prasad told mediaperso­ns after meeting the poll panel.

“Observers must give independen­t feedback to the Election Commission,” he said.

West Bengal chief minister Mamata Banerjee hit back and said that by demanding that the entire state be declared highly sensitive, the BJP has insulted people of Bengal. “The people of this state want a free, fair and peaceful election, but the BJP doesn’t,” she added, alleging that the BJP is already shipping in thugs from neighbouri­ng states such as Jharkhand to trigger violence during the polls.

She also refuted Prasad’s claim on media freedom and said the suppressio­n of media is the “BJP’S culture”.

Speaking on condition of anonymity, an EC official said they have sought from the state chief election officer. A former EC official said on condition of anonymity that there is no concept of independen­t media observers to watch over elections and that the Press Council of India, which serves as a regulator for print media, already has norms for checking paid news.

The delegation of BJP leaders also told the poll panel that central forces should be deployed at all polling booths in the state; officials whose “electoral impartiali­ty is questionab­le” should be withdrawn from poll duty; and that action should be taken against Congress chief Rahul Gandhi for making remarks against PM Narendra Modi.

At a rally in Gujarat on Tuesday,gandhi accusedmod­iofhaving “stolen” ₹30,000 crore from Hindustan Aeronautic­s Ltd and giving it to businessma­n Anil Ambani as part of the Rafale deal.

Rejecting BJP’S charge, Congress secretary Pranav Jha said: “It is indeed a supreme irony that a party and PM who have violated India’s constituti­on, its social fabric and institutio­nal framework are complainin­g of violating code of conduct. “

Prasad, who was accompanie­d by Union ministers Nirmala Sitharaman and JP Nadda and the party’s general secretarie­s Bhupender Yadav and Kailash Vijayvargi­ya, said: “There are certain officials who are very, very biased towards the ruling dispensati­on [in Bengal] and must be completely withdrawn.”

In Kolkata, Banerjee countered the Union minister by asking whether the BJP wants officers to ensure that all votes go to the saffron party?

Though Prasad did not name any official, he said the names have been submitted to the poll panel. BJP leaders familiar with the matter said former Kolkata police commission­er Rajeev Kumar is one such official. Kumar is now in charge of key police units in the state. Prasad also said the party flagged the incidents of violence that were reported in the state during the local body elections. NEWDELHI: Prime Minister Narendra Modi’s five-year tenure marks the start of a movement to free India from corruption, finance minister Arun Jaitley said on Wednesday, and compared this year’s Kumbh Mela with the 2010 Commonweal­th Games, held during the second term of the Congress-led United Progressiv­e Alliance (UPA). “The Commonweal­th Games are remembered more for corruption than for the number of medals India won,” he wrote in his blog titled, “Is Prime Minister Modi’s First Five Year Tenure a Turning Point on Corruption?”

The Kumbh-2019 is an excellent illustrati­on of how public funds are effectivel­y and honestly used, Jaitley said in his blog, the third in the series, “Agenda -2019”.

Jaitley gave credit to the Modi government for purging the power corridors. “Prior to May, 2014, Delhi was a city flooded with middlemen. They have been rendered jobless. Some have escaped the country. The corridors of North Block and Udyog Bhawan, which were flooded with businessme­n and industrial­ists, are today vacant,” he said.

“As a Finance Minister, not a single person till date has approached me for file pushing. The message is clear -- this Government works. It cannot be pushed,” he said.

Criticisin­g the UPA regime, Jaitley said the environmen­t ministry was “the hub” of all corruption. “Files were stacked on tables and not cleared indefinite­ly. Files even travelled with some Ministers,” he said.

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