CPI (M) defends Buddha over skipping politburo meet

New Delhi, Sep 5 (ANI): The Communist Party of India (Marxist) dismissed reports that West Bengal Chief Minister Buddhadeb Bhattacharjee was deliberately avoiding party’s two-day politburo meet, which began today on Saturday in the national capital.

According to reports, senior party leaders including Brinda Karat claimed that Buddhadeb had just recovered from viral fever and was advised by doctors to take rest, forcing party members urging him to stay back in Kolkata.

The CPI(M) Politburo is meeting to finalise a document to deal with its organisational problems, which led to its defeat in the recent polls in West Bengal and Kerala.

It is being assumed that topics regarding Lalgarh could be raised during the two-day meet, may have prompted Buddhadeb to give the meeting a miss.

It is also said that Buddhadeb is upset over reports of his successor or deputy being selected during the meet.

Differences between the West Bengal Chief Minister and CPI (M) leaders have been reported ever since party’s failure in the Lok Sabha elections, especially after the defeat they experienced in West Bengal during Lok Sabha polls. (ANI)

Ratan Tata says willing to return Singur land if compensated

Kolkata, Sep.1 (ANI): TATA Group chairman Ratan Tata on Tuesday told a press conference here that the failed NANO plant at Singur had cost him about 500 crore rupees, and he was willing to return the land if the State Government compensated Tata Motors.

“We do not want to sit on the land. We will return it if the State Government compensates us for the investments made there,” Ratan Tata said.

“We don’t intend to block development in West Bengal. The Singur plant cost us Rs.500 crore. We have other investments in West Bengal, which are on track,” he added.

Tata said this after holding meetings with West Bengal Chief Minister Buddhadeb Bhattacharya and State Commerce and Industry Minister Nirupam Sen.

Sen was also present at the press conference.

Tata said he had no plans to invest in Singur, but was open to any plan from the government.

“We have no plans for Singur but will cooperate with the government if they have a plan that makes sense to the government and us. We do not wish to sit on the land,” he said.

“West Bengal remains in our heart. One incident or one year does not matter in the life of a corporation,” he said.

At Tata Motors’ annual general meeting in Mumbai recently, Tata had said that he could return to Singur if the situation improved.

Today’s declaration puts to rest recent speculation about the possibility of Tata reviving the project in future.

However, when reminded of Mamata Banerjee’s demand to return the Singur land, he retorted, “But it is not her land.”

It may be recalled that Tata Motors exited Singur last October after a fierce agitation by Mamata Banerjee over compensation for farmers.

The company relocated the NANO project to Sanand in Gujarat.

The overall investment was Rs.1700 crore. Much of it has been recovered. The ‘sunk’ cost is estimated to be about Rs.500 crore. (ANI)

Security forces enter Lalgarh

Lalgarh (West Bengal) June 20(ANI): Security forces tasted the success in “Operation Lalgarh” by re capturing Lalgarh Police station amidst stiff gun battle and land mine blasts by the Maoist ultras in West Midnapore district of West Bengal.

The security men celebrated as the police station fell in their way, which was out of bound for nearly six months after an attempt on life of the Chief Minister Buddhadeb Bhattacharjee and two other union ministers in last November.

DIG of Midnapore Pravin Kumar said it would take another 48 hours to complete the operation, as the entire area has to be searched to make it clear from the Maoist activists.

Around 50 villages in and around Lalgarh were controlled and declared as “free zone” by the Maoist guerrillas.

The paramilitary forces, which started their march from the Bhimpur, base camp entered Lalgarh through the Jhitkar forests, which was believed to be the stronghold of red brigade.

According to the Superintendet of Police Humanyun Kabir, security men came under heavy firing from Maoists at the between Pingboni-Sarenga, the forces were obstructed by a human wall created by women in Pingboni.

Men from CRPF, BSF, State Armed Police, Eastern Frontier Rifles and the Kolkata Police besides the elite anti naxal force COBRA were involved in the operation.

Ousting the Naxals from the area was not an easy task for the forces as Maoists blocked roads and using land mines blew up the bridges.

In an immediate reaction Chief Minister Buddhadeb Bhattacharjee said he will give a serious thought to ban the Maoist organisations from his state. (ANI)

Buddhadeb to meet PM, Chidambaram today

New Delhi, June 20 (ANI): West Bengal Chief Minister Buddhadeb Bhattacharya is scheduled to meet Prime Minister Dr Manmohan Singh and Home Minister P. Chidambaram here to discuss Lalgarh issue today.

Meanwhile, state police backed by paramilitary personnel continued their efforts towards reclaiming Lalgarh from the Maoist stronghold.

On Friday evening, Maoists detonated a landmine targeting a police jeep and injuring two policemen at Pirakata bazar as the joint operation entered the second day.

Earlier, Chidambaram had said that the police operation in West Bengal’s Lalgarh town in West Midnapore district was going as planned.

Chidambaram said that the central forces were assisting the state police in the operations.

The Home Minister also appealed to the maoists to give up arms and talk to the state government to resolve their grievances. (ANI)

Protest against inefficient measures for cyclone Aila victims

Kolkata, May 30 (ANI): Congress Party supporters protested on Saturday against inefficient disaster management by the State authorities following cyclone Aila’s havoc in different parts of the state.

Protestors said that the relief work being carried out by the State Government was inadequate and much more needed to be done for affected people’s actual help.

Participants in the protest said that though the state government has demanded grant from the Central government but it remains to be assured that the money and relief material will reach the affected families.

Protestors also burnt the effigy of State Chief Minister Buddhadeb Bhattacharjee in Kolkata.

“The cyclone Aila has affected the southern and northern parts of the state leaving thousands of people affected. The river area of 400 kilometres has been affected. Vast damage has taken place. There has been a lot of damage. Almost 150 people have died. But the disaster management programme of the government of West Bengal, to tackle the aftermath of natural disasters, is a complete failure,” said Pradip Prasad, Youth Congress Party Leader leading the protest.

Cyclone Aila that originated over the Bay of Bengal on Monday (May 25) caused havoc in many parts of West Bengal and Bangladesh.

The resultant thunderstorm, tidal waves and flooding forced half a million people to abandon their homes in Medinipur, Sundarbans (located in South 24 Parganas), North 24 Parganas and Hooghly districts.

Millions of people in India and Bangladesh who have been temporarily displaced are in desperate need of water, food and adequate shelter after the cyclone Aila hit the region.

It is estimated that cyclone Aila killed at least 210 people and injured over 6,400 in India and Bangladesh.

While hundreds of thousands of residents were evacuated to cyclone shelters, schools, colleges and other buildings, the high winds and floods destroyed hundreds of thousands of homes, ravaged crops, killed livestock and damaged roads and bridges.

In West Bengal, authorities say that nearly 2.3 million people have been affected. (ANI)

Buddhadeb assures of more relief as ‘Aila’ death toll reaches 60

Kolkata, May 26 (ANI): The death toll due to havoc caused by cyclone ‘Aila’ in West Bengal has increased to 60. The highest number of deaths occurred in South 24 Parganas district followed by North 24 Parganas, Kolkata and Howrah.

Aila also wrecked havoc in Hooghly, Burdwan and Bankura districts of West Bengal on Monday. About 22 lakh people across the state have suffered losses, according to Chief Secretary Ashok Mohan Chakraborty.

The state government has released Rs.1 crore for rescue and relief so far. Eighteen hundred tonne of rice and one-lakh tarpaulins have been requisitioned for the purpose.

The ruling Left Front Government in Bengal seems to have finally woken up to the demands of the people after the crushing defeat in the recently held Lok Sabha polls.

In an effort to regain contact with the common man, Chief Minister Buddhadeb Bhattacharjee today personally visited a relief camp in Nimpith Panchayat under Joynagar Block in South 24 Parganas district, and assured the victims of all government support.

One of the major criticisms, which emerged against Left leaders after the poll debacle, was on their growing inaccessibility and loss of contact from the grass root levels.

Bhattacharjee’s visit to the village camp is being seem as an effort to assure the people that the ruling Left Front has not abandoned them.

The worst affected South 24 Parganas’ district administration has set up over 250 relief camps to accommodate those who have lost their home and hearth to high speed winds and high tides in the Sunderbans delta area.

The Chief Minister asked the victims not to worry about their lost homes, and promised them that money to rebuild homes would be made available within a few days time.

Bhattacharjee has assured that 57 tonne of dry food would be dispatched to the district expeditiously.

He advised the victims in the camp to keep an eye on their children and ensure that all got proper food. The rest, he said would be taken care of by the government. By Ajitha Menon (ANI)

CPI (M) Politburo begins discussions on poll debacle

New Delhi, May 18 (ANI): The CPI (M) politburo meeting on Monday began to discuss the poll debacle.

The meeting is being held amid reports that West Bengal Chief Minister Buddhadeb Bhattacharjee has offered to quit.

Politburo member and Left Front chairman Biman Bose described the report as “rubbish”.

Bhattacharjee is not attending the meeting, as he has to oversee the law and order situation in West Bengal after the announcement polls.

Apart from Bose, CPI (M) General Secretary Prakash Karat, Sitaram Yechury, Nirupam Sen, Pinarayi Vijayan, M K Pandhe, S R Pillai and the Chief Ministers of Kerala and Tripura, V S Achuthanandan and Manik Sarkar are attending the meeting.

The politburo is expected to seriously introspect the causes of their poll debacle, especially in their bastions of West Bengal and Kerala.

The other issues that could be taken up are land acquisition for industries, corruption and infighting on national issues.

The Left tally was an abysmal 24 compared to the 2004 figure of 61. (ANI)

West Bengal CM to skip CPI (M) politburo meet on Monday

Kolkata, May 17 (ANI): West Bengal Chief Minister Buddhadeb Bhattacharjee is likely to skip the CPI (M) politburo meeting on Monday in Delhi.

The reason for the West Bengal Chief Minister skipping the politburo meeting is that he wants to “oversee the law and order situation in the state”.

The move assumes significance in the wake of the Left Front’s debacle in the Lok Sabha elections in West Bengal. The politburo meeting has been convened to discuss the poll outcome.

Bhattacharjee is unlikely to attend the politburo meeting “as he has to oversee the law and order situation in the state after the announcement of Lok Sabha election results,” sources said. (ANI)

UPA, NDA working overtime to cobble up required majority

New Delhi, May 15 (ANI): The suspense continues to mount in political circles on which combine-the UPA or the NDA-will be in a position to form the next government at the Centre.

Key political leaders are travessing the length and breadth of the country meeting each other to determine and convince who will join which coalition or front.

Counting of votes will take place on Saturday, and most political leaders are saying that they will confabulate and reveal their respective positions after the results emerge.

“We are receiving positive indications from various parties. We will not reveal what we are discussing or what we have discussed till the results are out. Once the results are out, the BJP Parliamentary Party will meet and take stock and then decide the way forward,” said BJP president Rajnath Singh.

“Everything is fluid,” said NCP leader Praful Patel.

Congress leaders Pranab Mukherjee, A K Antony, Ahmad Patel and Digvijay Singh were huddled in talks till late last night.

Given his good equation with CPI-M veterans Jyoti Basu and West Bengal Chief Minister Buddhadeb Bhattacharjee, Mukherjee may be given the task of opening up the lines of communication with Left parties.

A meeting between BJP president Rajnath Singh and Samajwadi Party general secretary Amar Singh at a wedding reception last night set the political circles abuzz. The SP leader, however, dismissed media speculation of a political understanding being reached.

“People are aware that it is only Congress which can provide a stable government. All our allies are happy with us,” said Jayanthi Natarajan of Congress.

However, BJP spokesman Prakash Javadekar expressed confidence that his party will emerge as the single largest with more 30 seats that the Congress. “NDA will emerge as the single largest coalition with 50 seats more than UPA,” he claimed.

“All options are open. Everything will depend on the numbers,” said Amar Singh. The SP leader said he was in touch with CPI-M leader Sitaram Yechury and would be speaking to NCP leader Sharad Pawar.

The Fourth Front, comprising Lalu Yadav’s RJD, Ram Vilas Paswan’s LJP and SP have said the combine was averse to having any alliance with the BJP as also Mayawati’s BSP.

“Everybody is talking to everyone,” Patel went on to add.

JD(U) leader Sharad Yadav adopted a cautious approach. “There are some people with whom we are talking with some belief. The talks have been ongoing since yesterday night,” he said without elaborating.

“Congress does not use and throw its allies. We had a difference of opinion with RJD, LJP and the SP over the number of seats allotted to our party but they continued to be ministers and continue to be part of the UPA,” explained Natarajan.

“We shall prevent formation of a BJP-led government. This does not mean that automatically there would be a blanket support to a government led by the Congress,” CPI leader Gurudas Dasgupta contended. (ANI)

Left parties don’t consider Congress as untouchable : Buddhadeb

Kolkata, May 11 (ANI): West Bengal chief minister Buddhadeb Bhattacharjee on Monday said the Left parties did not consider Congress party “untouchable”. But they were working to form a Third Front government at the Centre and might join it if they could play any meaningful role in it.

Addressing media men in ‘meet the press’ programme here, Buddhadeb spoke on the role the Left parties are likely to play in the formation of the government at the centre.

Asked if the Left parties could support a Congress-led government, Buddhadeb said: “It is too early to comment who is going to support whom. At the moment we are trying to form a government without Congress and BJP”.

Replying to another question asking if the CPI (M) Left views the Congress to be untouchable, Buddhadeb said, “We don’t believe in untouchability.”

“We are trying to form a Third Front government at the Centre with like-minded secular and democratic parties and the Left will play a meaningful role in it. The Left will join a Third Front government if it can play a meaningful role in policy making and implementation,” Buddhadeb informed. the Chief Minister told the ‘meet the press’ programme at Kolkata on Monday.

“Let the elections be over and results be announced. Right now, we are trying to defeat the Congress and the BJP,” Buddhadeb said while adding that the CPI-M politburo would meet on May 18 after the counting after counting of votes to discuss the matter. (ANI)

No question of backing Left if it wants to take power: PM

Ludhiana, May 11 (ANI): Prime Minister Dr. Manmohan Singh today said there is no question of backing the Left if it wants to take power.

Addressing a press conference here, he said the Congress would get more seats, so there is no question of backing a Left government.

“At worst, the Congress will emerge as the single largest party,” he said, adding there was no question of backing the Left if it wanted to take power.

Sounding confident of winning over angry allies, he said, “The UPA will form the next government… politics is the art of possible.”

When asked about whether he would appeal to the Left to support UPA Government, he said, “I always believe that all secular forces have an obligation to work together to give the country a purposeful, secular government.”

The Prime Minister’s statement came as the left announced that West Bengal Chief Minister Buddhadeb Bhattacharya and Politburo member Sitaram Yachuri would engage the Left in preliminary talks on government formation after May 16.

When asked whether the Indo-US civil nuclear deal could be a sticky issue on forging ties with the Left, he said, “I think it is not an issue now. It has been signed, sealed and operationalised. It cannot be an issue for dialogue.”

Attacking the NDA and the Third Front, he said the former is a fractured alliance while the latter has collapsed even before polls.

Speaking on Bihar Chief Minister Nitish Kumar, Dr. Singh said Kumar’s secular credentials are in doubt after he met Gujarat Chief Minister Narendra Modi at an election rally here on Sunday.
He further added that Modi’s speech was a glimpse of the BJP if it came to power.

Commenting on the 1984 anti-Sikh riots, Dr Singh said his government had increased compensation paid to victims of the riots. (ANI)

Left to join govt. if it plays meaningful role: Buddhadeb

Kolkata, May 11 (ANI): West Bengal Chief Minister Buddhadeb Bhattacharjee on Monday said the Left would join the government if it can play a meaningful role in policy making and implementation.

Addressing at the ‘meet the press’ programme here, he said, “We are trying to form a Third Front Government at the Centre with like-minded secular and democratic parties and the Left will play a meaningful role in it.”

Keeping his options open, he said, “Let the elections be over and results be announced. Right now, we are trying to defeat the Congress and the BJP.”

Escaping a question on the issue of supporting a Congress-led government, he said, “It is too early to comment who is going to support whom. At the moment, we are trying to form a government without Congress and BJP”.

He further said that the CPI-M politburo would meet on May18 to hold discussion in this regard.

The Chief Minister also said that the Left parties don’t consider Congress as “untouchable”.

“We don’t believe in untouchability,” he added. (ANI)

West Bengal government moves to end Lalgarh impasse

Kolkata, April 20 (IANS) Officials of the Election Commission, the West Bengal government and representatives of agitating tribals will hold a meeting Wednesday to end the stalemate at Lalgarh on holding Lok Sabha polls on April 30.

The meeting will be held in Midnapore town, the district headquarters of Midnapore West.

Earlier, the tribal body Peoples’ Committee Against Police Atrocities (PCAPA) had submitted a 23-point charter of demands and said that it would allow central forces to be deployed for 12 hours on polling day for conducting the polls only if its demands were met.

Confirming the meeting, state home secretary Ardhendu Sen said the charter will be discussed, but the government will not give in to the demand that former police superintendent of police Rajesh Singh apologise to the tribals for alleged police atrocities.

‘We will discuss their demands but it does not mean that we will accept all of them,’ Sen said.

Besides state chief electoral officer Debashis Sen, the district superintendent of police, the district magistrate and the central observer for the Jhargram parliamentary constituency will attend the talks.

State’s special secretary (home), special secretary (backward class welfare) and special secretary (rural development) would take part in the deliberations, said the home secretary.

Trouble erupted in Lalgarh last November after the police arrested some school students and allegedly harassed tribal women following a landmine blast on the route of the convoy of Chief Minister Buddhadeb Bhattacharjee and central ministers Ram Vilas Paswan and Jitin Prasada near Bhadutala area.

Lalgarh residents have been protesting police ‘excesses’ and resisting a planned government crackdown ahead of the elections.
Indo Asian News Service

Buddha’s ‘attackers’ may go free

The West Bengal police admitted before a court that they had no evidence against the seven people arrested for involvement in the blasts in Salboni in West Midnapore district on November 2, 2008 that ripped off a vehicle in Chief Minister Buddhadeb Bhattacharjee’s convoy. The CPI (Maoist) state secretary had claimed responsibility for the blasts that had injured seven security personnel and a police driver.

The arrests had triggered a tribal movement against alleged police atrocities on women and children. Thousands of tribals had taken to the streets and cut off all communication by blocking roads with tree trunks.

The police have also pleaded for discharge of the accused. Of them, two were school students and one a dropout.

It was on November 15 that the police first admitted that the arrested persons were innocent. The final admission, along with the plea for discharge of the suspects – now out on bail – came on April 6.

Union Steel Minister Ram Vilas Paswan and Bhattacharjee had gone to Salboni to lay the foundation stone of a steel plant.

CPI-M fumes at Congress’ West Bengal report card, Pranab

Kolkata/New Delhi, April 6 (IANS) A day after senior Congress leader Pranab Mukherjee released a report card on the Left’s three decades of ‘misrule’ in West Bengal, the Marxists refuted the findings and, launching an attack on Mukherjee, wondered at his ‘doublespeak’.

Communist Party of India-Marxist (CPI-M) leader Biman Bose, speaking in Kolkata, expressed surprise over the ‘development report card’ released by Mukherjee, the West Bengal Pradesh Congress president.

‘He is an experienced politician and a professor. I don’t know how he could give all wrong information about West Bengal,’ Bose, the state Left Front chairman, said at a press conference here.

Citing a number of newspaper reports, he said: ‘I could not correlate the information Mukherjee provided Sunday and the statements he had delivered during various programmes with Chief Minister Buddhadeb Bhattacharjee just a month ago.’

‘I am sure somebody must have given him the false figures and asked him to read that out in front of the media as per the party’s instruction.’

Asked if Mukherjee was playing a ‘dual role’ before the coming Lok Sabha polls, Bose declined to comment.

‘I just can’t say he’s playing a dual role. But he should not deliver such wrong information without cross-checking it properly,’ he said, adding that none of the figures provided by Mukherjee was correct.

The report titled ’30 years of Left Front rule in West Bengal: A development report card’ alleges that the CPI-M-led government failed to provide proper healthcare and education or generate employment in the state.

In New Delhi, CPI-M politburo member Brinda Karat expressed the communists’ ire over the report and at Mukherjee.

‘Pranab Mukherjee appreciated the West Bengal government on Feb 2 and March 2 for undertaking development programmes. This shows his doublespeak. He now has to answer why this double standard in just one month,’ she said.

Refuting the findings, Brinda Karat said: ‘The Congress document shows that the West Bengal government has been doing well enough on the indices of poverty, hunger and malnutrition and education. Selective statistics should not be looked and used for political motives.’

Taking on the Congress-led United Progressive Alliance (UPA), she said: ‘What is the report card of the UPA? Did they tell the people that Maharashtra has the highest number of farmer suicides. The Congress party has entirely ignored the agriculture factor and plight of farmers.’

Brinda Karat also criticised the Congress and the Bharatiya Janata Party (BJP) for writing off the Third Front.

‘Both Congress and BJP have tried to scuttle the Third Front, but it finds regular mention by them. This shows their desperation for power. Their efforts of ensuring a two-party system has failed,’ she added.

Referring to the BJP fielding Jaswant Singh from Darjeeling and the party aligning with the Gorka Janamukti Morcha (GJM) for the polls, Brinda Karat said: ‘The BJP has fielded senior leader Jaswant Singh from Darjeeling constituency on the shoulders of an outfit which is out to divide Bengal on the basis of ethnic and linguistic identity.’

She also released the CPI-M’s audio CD for the poll campaign called ‘Aaina’.

Lalgarh’s tribal agitators threaten to resist police action

Kolkata, April 5 (IANS) People from Lalgarh will put up mass resistance if security forces tried to enter the area, their top leader said here Sunday, a day after the West Bengal government said it will soon announce a plan to enable the police enter the tribal-dominated region.

‘We will not allow the police or the central paramilitary forces to enter Lalgarh. If they try to forcibly enter, we will form mass resistance groups to stop the police,’ said Chatradhar Mahato, leader of the People’s Committee Against Police Atrocities (PCAPA) formed by the agitating tribals.

‘If we allow the police or the paramilitary forces, then Communist Party of India-Marxist (CPI-M) hooligans will sneak into Lalgarh in the disguise of the security forces,’ Mahato alleged in a media meet at the Calcutta Press Club here.

He said the residents of Lalgarh in West Midnapore district could not move freely in the area when the police established a reign of terror. ‘Now, there is no police team and we can move around freely. And there are no disturbances.’

Asked how the administrative offices were functioning in the absence of the police, Mahatato said: ‘Both panchayat and the block development office are working fine.’

The PCAPA has already put up two check-posts at Raigarh and Barotelia to prevent the police and activists of the CPI-M, the state’s main ruling party, from entering the area.

For conducting the Lok Sabha polls, Mahato said, the Election Commission representatives should approach the PCAPA, which would provide security to all polling personnel.

‘We want the polls, but not the police or the paramilitary forces in our area,’ he reiterated.

In a warning to the state government, the tribal leader said: ‘We don’t want another Nandigram. But if the government tries to use force, it will be responsible for the consequences.’

State Home Secretary Ardhendu Sen said Saturday that the government would announce within a week a comprehensive plan of action for Lalgarh.

‘We’ve got intelligence inputs that Maoists guerrillas are still actively operating in the region,’ he added.

In protest against the government’s proposed move, the PCAPC will organise a rally in the area Monday.

Trouble erupted in Lalgarh last November after the police arrested some school students and allegedly harassed tribal women following a landmine blast on the route of the convoy of Chief Minister Buddhadeb Bhattacharjee and central ministers Ram Vilas Paswan and Jitin Prasada near Bhadutala area.

Later, the tribals, allegedly backed by the Maoists, dug up roads and placed big tree trunks across them, virtually cutting off the trouble-prone zone from the rest of the district.

They also demanded a public apology from the police for the alleged excesses against them.

Police-resident clash building up in West Bengal

Kolkata, April 4 (IANS) The West Bengal government will soon announce its plan of action for tribal-dominated Lalgarh region of West Midnapore district, where a group of residents put up two check posts to prevent the police and Communist Party of India-Marxist (CPI-M) workers from entering the area, a senior official said Saturday.

‘We’ll announce our comprehensive plan of police action in West Midnapore’s Lalgarh but for that we need some more time. We are hopeful of announcing everything within a week,’ state Home Secretary Ardhendu Sen told reporters here.

‘We’ve got intelligence inputs that Maoists guerrillas are still actively operating in the region,’ he added.

Sen had said last month the police would carry out a combing operation to sniff out Maoist rebels from the Lalgarh region before the Lok Sabha polls.

The check posts were put up by the members of the People’s Committee Against Police Atrocities (PCAPA) at Raigarh and Barotelia area of Lalgarh.

‘We’ve heard about this development… that two check posts were put up in two different places near Lalgarh to prevent the police force from entering the region,’ West Midnapore Superintendent of Police R.K. Singh told IANS, adding that action would be taken against the PCAPA members.

PCAPA leader Chattrodhar Mahato said they were keeping a regular watch on these two check points to prevent the police or any ‘hooligans’ from the state’s ruling CPI-M from entering their villages and planned to set up two more check posts for the purpose.

Trouble erupted in Lalgarh last November after the police arrested some school students and allegedly harassed tribal women after a landmine blast on the route of the convoy of Chief Minister Buddhadeb Bhattacharjee and central ministers Ram Vilas Paswan and Jitin Prasada near Bhadutala area.

Later, the tribals, allegedly backed by the Maoists, dug up roads and placed big tree trunks across them, virtually cutting off the trouble-prone zone from the rest of the district.

They also demanded a public apology from the police for the alleged excesses committed against them.

Tata Motors moving out bad for West Bengal, opinion poll

New Delhi, April 2 (IANS) A majority of people in West Bengal believe that Tata Motors moving out of Singur is not good for the state, and many have given the electoral thumbs down to Trinamool Congress chief Mamata Banerjee, whose sustained anti-land acquisition campaign forced Tata to move the Nano plant to Gujarat, according to an opinion poll.

The poll conducted by NDTV news channel says that West Bengal Chief Minister Buddhadeb Bhattacharjee is the most popular leader in the state and is likely to retain his post.

‘Buddhadeb Bhattacharjee emerges as the most popular candidate to be the next chief minister in West Bengal with 46 percent people in favour of him whereas Mamata Banerjee trails by 32 percent,’ NDTV said in a release.

Though the channel asked respondents on who they thought would be the best bet for chief minister, the state will not be holding assembly polls now.

Lok Sabha polls will be held in West Bengal on April 30, May 7 and May 13.

According to the opinion poll, 64 percent people in West Bengal believe that the winding up of the Singur plant by Tatas was not good for the state. More than 60 percent believe that the Buddhadeb government has done enough on development indicators like ‘bijli, sadak and paani’ (power, roads and water).

An overwhelming 77 percent people are not in favour of creation of a separate state of Gorkhaland in north Bengal.

In Kerala, of the people surveyed, 71 percent believe that the rift between Chief Minister V.S. Achuthanandan and secretary of the Kerala unit of Communist Party of India-Marxist Pinarayi Vijayan would not effect their voting decision.

EC pipes down to ‘only living’, too late for CM

day after he angrily described as “absurd” an Election Commission directive against displaying any posters or pictures of political figures in government offices, Chief Minister Buddhadeb Bhattacharjee today piped down and ordered the removal of all his 24 photographs displayed at the photo gallery in front of his office.

The CM’s order came even before an EC clarification could reach the Writers’ Buildings, in which the Commission has said its earlier directive was only about the photographs of living political functionaries. “The Commission has respect for great national leaders. Their pictures can remain there,” Chief Electoral Officer Debashis Sen said.

While the CM was quick to get his all 24 posters in the gallery outside his office removed in the morning itself, his Cabinet colleagues could not care less.

The photographs of former chief minister Jyoti Basu, adorning the offices of Minister for Sports and Transport Subhas Chakraborty and Minister for Fisheries Kiranmoy Nanda remained in their places.

This apart, almost all the ministers have their photographs shot during some government function and displayed in their chambers. For example, there are five photographs of Minister for Commerce and Industries Nirupam Sen displayed in his room. Minister for Jails and Social Welfare Biswanath Choudhury and PWD minister Kshiti Goswamy also have their pictures displayed in their respective chambers.

Chief Secretary Asok Mohan Chakrabarti said in the evening that the government had not received any clarification from the EC.

Meanwhile, the ministers are biding their time. “We are waiting for the clarification. In fact, I have already checked with the chief secretary’s office. If any directive comes for removal of my photographs, I will do that,” Goswamy said. At the Kolkata Municipal Corporation, photos of the present Mayor Bikash Bhattacharya and that of former Mayors Subrata Mukherjee and Prasanta Chatterjee remained on the walls. “We are not removing them unless we get a clear order,” Bhattacharya said.

Chidambaram’s letter ruffles feathers at Writers

Eyebrows were raised at the chief minister’s secretariat as a letter from Union Home Minister P Chidambaram addressed to CM Buddhadeb Bhattacharjee advised him not to ask security agencies to do anything against the law of the land.

State Chief Secretary Asok Mohan Chakrabarti personally brought the letter from Delhi on March 27.

“We met today to discuss the Central directives,” Chakrabarti said on Tuesday.

The letter, written to all chief ministers, has advised them on their conduct at home, public places and during political rallies.

“It says the chief minister should not discuss his travel plans with domestic helps. He should be careful about what he eats and with whom he mingles before and during rallies. He should not ask the security agencies to do anything that goes against the law of the land and should keep the Union Home Ministry posted about his movements. Some of these orders are so ridiculous,” a state government official said.