BJP Slams Mamata Banerjee for Alleged Intimidation and Anti-National Remarks

The BJP has accused West Bengal Chief Minister Mamata Banerjee of using threatening language against opposition parties, deviating from her previous slogan promoting change over revenge. BJP’s Sukanta Majumdar condemned her remarks as inciting and anti-national, urging for her resignation in a letter to Union Home Minister Amit Shah.


Devdiscourse News Desk | Kolkata | Updated: 28-08-2024 17:59 IST | Created: 28-08-2024 17:59 IST
BJP Slams Mamata Banerjee for Alleged Intimidation and Anti-National Remarks
West Bengal Chief Minister Mamata Banerjee
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The BJP on Wednesday accused West Bengal Chief Minister Mamata Banerjee of threatening opposition parties by abandoning her previous slogan of 'badla noy, badal chai' (no revenge, only change) in response to alleged insults from the opposition.

At the Trinamool Congress Chhatra Parishad (TMCP) foundation day rally, Banerjee remarked that the slogan needed to be updated to reflect changing times and situations. ''The time has come to resist and protest when you are insulted. When faced with ugly attacks, do not take it lying down. How you respond is up to you,'' she said.

In response, BJP state president and Union Minister of State Sukanta Majumdar condemned Banerjee's remarks as unprecedented and threatening and shot off a letter to Union Home Minister Amit Shah stating that Banerjee ''no longer deserves to hold such an important position''. ''It is unthinkable and unprecedented for a Chief Minister, who is constitutionally bound to rise above partisan attitudes, to make such intimidating statements that pose a threat to democracy,'' Majumdar told reporters.

Majumdar argued that Banerjee's comments could incite TMC supporters to take the law into their own hands and attack opposition members, thereby stifling democratic dissent.

He also criticised Banerjee's statement suggesting that if Bengal were to be engulfed in flames, neighboring states such as Jharkhand, Odisha, Assam, and even distant Delhi would also be affected. Majumdar described this as contrary to the federal spirit of the republic. ''It is unthinkable for an elected Chief Minister to make such a comment. How can she say such things?'' he questioned.

Majumdar expressed hope that Banerjee was not alluding to any extremist groups with her remarks. He also criticised her comments about the agitation by R G Kar doctors, viewing them as intimidation and indicative of her fear that the spontaneous protest against the rape-murder of a woman doctor would not cease at her command.

''The honourable court has already upheld the democratic rights of junior doctors. The Chief Minister cannot coerce them into silence until justice is served,'' Majumdar added. Majumdar wrote a letter to Union Home Minister Amit Shah, condemning Banerjee's reported comments as a ''blatant endorsement of revenge politics from the highest office in the state.'' In the letter, Majumdar accused Banerjee of making anti-national remarks by suggesting that if Bengal were to burn, other states would also be affected.

''This isn't the voice of someone holding a constitutional position. It's the voice of an anti-national,'' Majumdar stated in his letter, asserting that Banerjee ''no longer deserves to hold such an important position'' and calling for her immediate resignation.

(With inputs from agencies.)

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