Sunday, April 26, 2026

Diamond Harbour Model with a spin :::: Cracking whip on five TMC-friendly cops ::::: Election Commission still on move.... this time Abhishek's fiefdom Diamond Harbour ---report on additional SP Garai’s activities sought

EC deals Harbour blow: Suspension stick for senior cops on Abhishek turf


The commission has directed the chief secretary to submit a report on additional SP Sandip Garai’s activities to his cadre-controlling authority, the Union home ministry — a first such directive this Bengal election. 


The poll panel directed Bengal chief secretary Dushyant Nariala to suspend additional SP Sandip Garai, SDPO Sajal Mondal, the inspectors-in-charge of the Falta and Diamond Harbour police stations, and the officer-in-charge of Usthi police station and initiate departmental proceedings against them.


These officers are alleged for working in a manner partisan to West Bengal’s ruling party.







"The 'Syndicate King' is now just a guest for a few more days. Didi is on her way out, BJP is coming to power. Even in Tollygunge now, only BJP's victory chants are echoing." - Amit Shah 








The Election Commission enforced its own “Diamond Harbour model” late on Friday night by cracking the whip on five police officers, including an IPS officer, from the seven Assembly seats that make up Trinamool No. 2 Abhishek Banerjee’s Lok Sabha constituency.


“Diamond Harbour is in the fourth stage of cancer in terms of electoral malpractices. That’s why, urgent surgery had to be performed to ensure free and fair elections there,” a senior poll panel official said.  


The EC asked the chief secretary to issue a warning to Ishani Pal, the Diamond Harbour SP, for her alleged failure to ensure her subordinates worked with fairness during the elections.


These steps suggest the commission considers the seven Assembly seats of Falta, Diamond Harbour, Satgachia, Bishnupur, Mahestala, Budge Budge and Metiabruz in the Diamond Harbour Lok Sabha constituency as the most trouble-prone, sources said.


Diamond Harbour, on Calcutta’s southern fringes, is the turf of Trinamool national general secretary Abhishek, who has been representing the Lok Sabha seat since 2014.


His vaunted development and governance model for the area — covering infrastructure, healthcare, welfare and political management — is often referred to as the “Diamond Harbour model”.






Huge Turnout for Amit Shah's rally is linked to 'fearless voting' 





The Election Commission has also ordered the suspension of the officer-in-charge (OC) of Hingalganj police station in West Bengal's North 24 Parganas district after allegations that he was acting in a partisan manner ahead of the Assembly elections.


In a communication to Chief Secretary Nariala, the EC said it had examined a report submitted by state Chief Electoral Officer (CEO) Manoj Agarwal on April 21 regarding complaints of bias and an alleged nexus between the OC and "local elements". 


Meanwhile, West Bengal BJP's twitter handle says - "Mamata Banerjee appears visibly rattled and leaves the sabha after seeing empty chairs at her Bhabanipur sabha, now shifting blame to a nearby BJP rally.

The signs are clear—impending defeat is breeding frustration."


ends 





Saturday, April 25, 2026

Celebrated photographer Raghu Rai is no more !! His photographs would be always Unforgettable, Timeless but often Unsettling

 Raghu Rai began learning the craft in 1962, and by 1965 he had joined The Statesman newspaper in New Delhi as its chief photographer.


From The Statesman to Magnum: How Raghu Rai Rose to Global Prominence







The trajectory that followed was remarkable by any standard. In 1971, Raghu Rai exhibited his work in Paris, where it caught the attention of the French master Henri Cartier-Bresson — arguably the most influential photographer of the twentieth century. 

Cartier-Bresson was so struck by what he saw that he personally nominated Rai to join Magnum Photos in 1977, making him one of the agency's rare Indian members and cementing his place in the global canon.






By that point, Rai had already left The Statesman — departing in 1976 to become picture editor of Sunday, a weekly news magazine published from Calcutta. 


In 1980, he moved again, this time to India Today, where from 1982 to 1991 he contributed what many consider the definitive picture essays of that era.  


He had five-six long decades of exceptional images and the stories behind them. 


He was arguably; India’s greatest photographer.


His photographs of war, faith, monuments like the Taj Mahal, ordinary Indians, leaders, PM Indira Gandhi, saints and charlatans, deserts and much else besides in black and white, and in colour, are imprinted on our memory. 


Timeless, often unsettling, and always unforgettable, his pictures perhaps 'changed' the way people and leaders saw the world and its dynamism.


Raghu Rai has published almost 40 books of photographs. 





                              Born: 1942, Jhang, now in Pakistan; Raghu breathed his last on April 26, 2026 


Donald Trump evacuated from White House correspondents’ dinner after loud bangs heard ....gunshots fired :::: Trump says 'shooter apprehended'

 US President Donald Trump and First Lady Melania Trump were evacuated from the White House Correspondents' Association Dinner at the Washington Hilton Hotel on Saturday night after loud, unidentified noises triggered a major security response.


Trump says 'shooter apprehended' after president rushed from White House Correspondents' Dinner





Guests at the high-profile event abruptly stopped conversations as shouts of “Get down, get down!” rang out. 

Hundreds of the roughly 2,600 attendees took cover under tables while Secret Service agents in combat gear rushed into the dining area.  

BBC's Indrani Basu writes:


We had just finished our first course of salad at around 20:30 local time (01:30 BST) when I heard what sounded like glass shattering. Did someone drop a tray of wine glasses, was my immediate thought.


The BBC North America bureau chief, seated to my right, pulled my arm and shouted to get down. We all crawled under our table for what felt like a long time, but was probably just under five minutes. Eventually, we started crawling out after the immediate threat seemed to be over.






"I saw the main stage had been evacuated, where the president of the United States had been seated just minutes earlier," Basu said. 





US President Donald Trump posts, 


"Quite an evening in D.C. Secret Service and Law Enforcement did a fantastic job. They acted quickly and bravely. The shooter has been apprehended, and I have recommended that we “LET THE SHOW GO ON” but, will entirely be guided by Law Enforcement. They will make a decision shortly. 


Regardless of that decision, the evening will be much different than planned, and we’ll just, plain, have to do it again."



According to a White House aide, Trump was safe after a freelance photographer reported hearing four to six loud bangs inside the hotel, though not in the immediate vicinity of the dinner hall. Initial media reports suggested the presence of a gunman, prompting panic among attendees.

The Guardian’s Rachel Leingang was seated at the table alongside colleagues and guests when someone yelled that shots had been fired. Guests began diving under the tables. She recalls Secret Service agents running in and moving chairs of the way as they raced down the aisles.


“Everyone kind of stayed under the tables for a little while, until people started like popping back up and then everyone tried to figure out what was going on – they were talking to each other like, ‘What happened? What happened?’”


Then security agents came inside of the ballroom and said everyone needed to leave. Rachel said she left the room.


Now Rachel is outside, where the sounds of sirens and helicopters are buzzing all around. She is safe, and said the exits have been blocked. 


CNN anchor Wolf Blitzer said he was within a few feet of the shooter, and called into CNN to describe his observations.


Blitzer said he saw “a very, very serious weapon. He starts shooting, and I happened to have been a few feet away from him. As he was shooting, of course, the first thing that went through my mind: is he trying to shoot me? 

And I don’t think he was trying to shoot me, but I was very close to him as the gunshots were fired and he was very very scary. 

But I’m okay, now.”  


The White House Correspondents’ Dinner is a black-tie event hosted by the association of journalists who cover the US president, held annually in the cavernous ballroom Washington Hilton.


Known as “nerd prom” the evening has traditionally been attended by the president, political leaders, comedians and celebrities, who come together in celebration of press freedom. Often the presidentHowever, Trump had made it a practice not to attend during his first term. This year was the first time he had ever attended the event, and was set to make a speech.







A number of lawmakers have posted statements on social media about tonight's dinner.
Democratic Senate Minority Leader Chuck Schumer says he is "closely monitoring the unfolding situation at the White House Correspondents Dinner".


"I’m grateful for the quick response of law enforcement and am praying everyone remains safe," he says.

Republican Senator Rand Paul says: "Thank God the President and all of the attendees tonight are safe."

Republican Representative Nancy Mace says Americans should "pray for President Trump and for our country right now".



Attendees check their phones in the lobby of the Washington Hilton after shots were heard during the White House Correspondents' Dinner in Washington (BBC snap) 



Amit Shah’s rise as the BJP’s master strategist dates back to the 2014 :::::: AAP Split Shocker: Is Trinamool Next in BJP’s Bengal Playbook?


By NIRENDRA DEV

— Was the split in the Aam Aadmi Party (AAP) on April 24 a coincidence—or a calculated political signal? And more crucially, could All India Trinamool Congress (TMC) face a similar churn as West Bengal heads into a high-stakes electoral phase?


“The biggest guru-mantra is: never share your secrets with anybody. It will destroy you,” wrote Chanakya—a line often invoked to describe the political style of Amit Shah.







Shah’s rise as the BJP’s master strategist dates back to the 2014 Lok Sabha elections in Uttar Pradesh, where he engineered a stunning victory—73 out of 80 seats for the NDA, including 71 for the BJP. That performance amplified the Narendra Modi wave nationally and cemented Shah’s reputation as a formidable election manager.

In contrast, Rahul Gandhi’s electoral record has often been cited by critics as less successful, sharpening the narrative of BJP’s strategic dominance.  


From Mamata Banerjee’s 2014 jibe to Amit Shah’s 2026 ground push, Bengal’s battle intensifies amid Aam Aadmi Party turmoil  


West Bengal tells a story of dramatic transformation. In 2014, when Mamata Banerjee famously asked, “Who is Amit Shah?”, the BJP was a marginal player. The party held just two Lok Sabha seats—Darjeeling and Asansol—and remained on the fringes of state politics.


Even in 2017, the BJP’s assembly presence was negligible. But by 2021, it had surged to become the principal opposition, displacing both the Left and the Congress—an outcome that reshaped Bengal’s political landscape.


Now, the 2026 contest is effectively a bipolar battle between the BJP and the TMC. High voter turnout—over 90% in the April 23 phase—has added unpredictability, reminiscent of the 2011 election that ended Left rule.


Amid this backdrop, the April 24 developments in AAP’s Rajya Sabha ranks—seen as a sudden and unexpected split—have triggered wider political speculation. While the immediate impact may be limited to Delhi and Punjab, the timing has raised eyebrows in Bengal’s political circles.  


The underlying question being whispered: if AAP can fracture, why not TMC?


Reports suggest that “floating voters” could play a decisive role in the upcoming phases. 

Speculation is rife that if the BJP crosses the 110–120 seat mark in the 294-member assembly, it could emerge as the single largest force, setting the stage for post-poll maneuvering. 

The majority mark stands at 148.


Internally, TMC faces its own tensions. The generational shift led by Abhishek Banerjee has not been universally accepted within the party, with sections of the old guard reportedly uneasy about his leadership prospects.


Meanwhile, Shah’s extended stay in Kolkata—marked by back-to-back meetings with political actors, intellectuals, and business intermediaries—signals a deeper, multi-layered strategy.


For Shah personally, Bengal carries stakes beyond the state. As succession debates within the BJP quietly simmer, the 2026 electoral outcomes could shape the future leadership trajectory under Modi. 


Whether the AAP split was an isolated incident or part of a broader political pattern remains to be seen. But in Bengal’s charged atmosphere, even distant tremors are being read as signals of an impending political shift.





( courtesy - The Raisina Hills )


ends 

In 2021, in Nandigram she tried 'wheel-chair'; in 2026 .... Mamata leaves stage amidst 'chor' slogans from BJP rally in Bhabanipur


“See how they are shouting. All the media is here. It is insulting and humiliating. They are shouting because they don’t want me to hold the meeting. I beg your pardon. I will not be able to address you now. Tomorrow I will hold a rally here," said Mamata Banerjee.


A tense showdown unfolded in Bhabanipur on Saturday as Trinamool Congress supremo Mamata Banerjee and BJP leader Suvendu Adhikari held rallies barely 100 metres apart, triggering clashes between supporters of both parties.


This was a typical Drama Queen - a role she played in Nandigram in 2021 and campaigned on wheel chair and as the results came in giving her the mandate; the wheel chair had vanished. 






BJP leader Amit Malviya also weighed in, sharing a video of the incident and accusing Mamata Banerjee of losing her composure due to fears of her party's impending defeat.


"Everyone saw what happened. How our chief minister was insulted. This will go against the BJP," said Sovandeb Chatterjee, a senior TMC leader who was present at the public meeting trying to draw sympathy.


The incident took place at night near the Swaminarayan temple on Chakraberia Road.


"I apologise and I will leave. Please vote for me in protest of this,” said a visibly disturbed Banerjee, who left the stage.


Video Link


“We have taken official permission to hold this meeting. I was away from Bhabanipur for about a month because I was campaigning for the entire Bengal. I was campaigning for about 200 seats, and Abhishek (Abhishek Banerjee, TMC All India general secretary and Lok Sabha MP) was also campaigning. I will take legal action against this,” said Banerjee before leaving the stage.


Earlier, during a BJP rally, Suvendu Adhikari, the party’s candidate for Bhabanipur, had alleged that TMC put up loudspeakers to disrupt his event.


The Bhabanipur Assembly seat, which falls within Kolkata, is set to see a showdown between Mamata Banerjee and Adhikari. Adhikari is also contesting from his home turf of Nandigram, where he had defeated Mamata by less than 2,000 votes in 2021.



After the EC’s Special Intensive Revision (SIR) exercise, a total of 51,000 voters were deleted from the rolls in Bhabanipur, amounting to 21% of its electorate. 

These deletions have put pressure on the TMC chief, whose victory margin in the 2021 by-election from Bhabanipur was about 58,800 votes. 


In the cosmopolitan Bhabanipur, Mamata is expected to visit Jain temples and Sikh gurdwaras to attract non-Bengali voters. She has been holding padayatras and closed-door meetings with residents of high-rises, where there are considerable non-Bengali voters.



Mamata leaving stage - Video






Frustration growing among TMC candidates:


“I will be defeated in Sagardighi. Jakir and Noor Alam will also be defeated from Jangipur and Samserganj assembly seats. Our candidate in Farakka will also be defeated. I can’t say about the entire state,” TMC's Sagardighi MLA Bayron Biswas said.


Bayron rushed to the Jangipur Polytechnic College strongroom, where EVMs have been kept under heavy deployment of Central Armed Paramilitary Forces (CAPF), on Friday midnight and expressed his grievances, alleging non-functioning of CCTVs and cameras installed inside and outside.


He also alleged that the power supply was disrupted at the strongroom premises for long hours.

He strongly protested against the prevailing situation at the strongroom and alleged that it was a pre-planned conspiracy to ensure the defeat of Trinamool Congress candidates. 


But such remarks of a candidate is surprising and only displays frustration. 


ends 

West Bengal Political Dynamics ::::: Dinhata - TMC recorded win but the margin was only 57 votes ::: Singur remains trapped without industry and no longer good for agriculture

Ratan Tata's big announcement came in October 2008 

In no time he received an SMS from the then Gujarat chief minister - "Welcome to Gujarat".


Eighteen years on, the Gujarati is now India's Prime Minister. Another Gujarati - Amit Shah is a chief political strategist who has taken the battle to the interiors of West Bengal. Hubs like Nandigram and Singur included.


In fact Singur heralded a new era - the downfall of the communists and the emergence of Mamata Banerjee as the chief minister of West Bengal.

But Singur remains trapped between two ruins -- a car factory that never came up and the farmland that no longer yields agri products as before.  









In 2006, the then Left Front government acquired around 1,000 acres in Singur for Tata Motors' small-car project. 

TMC chief Mamata Banerjee played a spoilsport. She built up a mass agitation with villagers and pro-Naxal elements around claims that the fertile, multi-crop land was being taken from unwilling farmers.


What followed reshaped Bengal politics.   


When Ratan Tata announced in October 2008 that the Nano project would be shifted to Gujarat's Sanand, it marked the beginning of the end of the Left's 34-year rule.



A Reformist Communist - Buddhadeb Bhattacharya 




2011, Miracle happened. Mamata Banerjee entered the Writers' Buildings, the state's seat of power -- the building was renamed Nabanno.

Kolkata's red identity was replaced by blue. At times even to the level of violation of international traffic guidelines.

She stayed on as the chief minister for 15 long years.

The anti-land acquisition movements in Singur and Nandigram became part of the history or her-story.


But in Singur itself, triumph has turned into regret. The Supreme Court's 2016 order returning land to "unwilling" farmers was celebrated by the TMC as vindication. On paper, the land came back. On the ground, much of it did not.  







Mind Game and claim of 110 seats by BJP for phase 1 -- 152 seats: 

Those segments where elections have been done on April 23 - include 54 seats in North Bengal. Now the break up -- 

Cooch Behar has 9 seats -- in 2021 - BJP had won 7 and TMC got - 2 

Alipurduar  - out of 5 seats - it was clean sweep for BJP (all five). TMC- score was 'zero'. 

Darjeeling -- same BJP sweep -- scored five out of Five 


Uttar Dinajpur - BJP had won only 2 out of 9 and Trinamool had picked up 7 

Jalpaiguri - out of 7 -- BJP had won 4 and TMC won - 3 

Dakshin Dinajpur -- out of 6 -- both the parties had shared three each 


Malda - out of 12 -- TMC got 8 and BJP - remaining four (Notably has over 50 per cent Muslim population)  

Now Junglemahal region ::: --- West Medinipore - in 2021 TMC had 13; BJP could win only 2. 

Jhargram -- In 2026, the region made news for Jhalmuri. But in 2021 - it was a clean sweep for the BJP. Mamata-led out had clean sweep of all four seats. 


Purulia - Has 9 seats -- in 2021 - BJP won 6 and TMC remaining 3 

Bankura --- BJP had won 8 out of 12; the remaining four went to TMC 

Murshidabad (famous as being Muslim-stronghold) - Out of 22 seats - as expected in 2021 - TMC had won 20 --- BJP had won 2 (one of them was Bahrampur) 


East Medinipore is also politically crucial in this region. Here out of 16; TMC had won - 9 -- BJP managed to win remaining 7. 


Birbhum has 11 segments -- out of these in 2021 ---  BJP had won only one; and the rest 10 went to TMC's kitty. Importantly from statics point of view -- there were some seats in 2021 -- where the victory margin was minimum --- Take a closer look ---  


In Dinhata - TMC recorded win but the margin was only 57 votes. In 


Jalpaiguri = TMC won the seat by a slender margin of 941 votes. 

Coach Behar South --- BJP had won; and margin 4931 votes (that is below 5000 votes bar)   

Falakata -- BJP won the seat and margin was around 3000 votes only. 

Tapan seat - BJP had won and the victory margin was 1300 only 



Debate about elections in West Bengal 2026 

** Win for BJP and defeat for TMC --- would have serious and several far-reaching consequenes. 

** Internal rebellion will catch up TMC.

Gradually Mamata Banerjee may face 'personal marginalization'.

&&& 







From analysis point -- For West Bengal, this election transcends mere seat/vote counts. 

Sickular journos throwing up big phrases - a so-called contest between institutional headwinds and democratic exceptionalism.

Half the things would not make sense except sounding bombastically intellectual.

They do not want to flag off the real issues -  Threats to national security. 

Demographic Jihad and illegal immigration of Bangladeshi Muslims. 







On the other hand; a TMC victory possibly may create a bigger challenge for Rahul Gandhi and the Congress party in 'INDI-alliance'. 

Notably, West Bengal has always preferred to remain on the 'opposite' box of the Govt in the centre. An anti-Delhi state trying to uphold Bengali pride.


There is a facade in that as the larger conspiracy seemed to be aimed at assisting the Demography Jihad.  


All these harmed the state and the people. Nevertheless; there was a perception that West Bengal would always stand firm as a defender of federalism. Though for practical reasons - it's all a left-liberal gimmick. 


Nationally, if TMC wins and if Mamata is accepted as 'national leader'; it could provide fresh energy to the otherwise demoralised opposition combo.


If TMC falls; India's 'regionalism frame' of polity will suffer a serious set back.




Was AAP split deliberately planned for April 24 ? Can Trinamool Congress go the AAP way ?? ::: In 2014; when Mamata said - Who is Amit Shah'; TMC supporters mocked at BJP !!

"The biggest guru-mantra is: never share your secrets with anybody. It will destroy you." -- Chanakya 


It may not be without good reasons that Amit Shah is called BJP's Chanakya vis-a-vis drawing out electoral strategies.  








Amit Shah's electoral success in national politics began with Uttar Pradesh in 2014 polls when as the BJP general secretary in-charge UP; Shah ensured NDA picks up 73 seats including 71 for the saffron outfit. 


That figure made the 'Narendra Modi wave' of 2014 seemingly so much real. Since then, Shah has almost handled about 100 elections - if Rahul Gandhi has lost over 90 electoral battles; Shah has won as many. 


This made all the difference to the Moditva phenomenon. Around 2014 December; BJP's low-profile in-charge for Bengal, Siddharth Singh (grand son of Lal Bahadur Shastri) gave a clarion call - "Bhag Mamata, Bhag". Now in 2026 --- it all seems near a striking distance !! 

When Mamata had mocked - "Who is Amit Shah" -- everyone mocked at the Lotus party and the then BJP president. 


Even as late as 2017 - the BJP was nowhere. It could win only 3 seats in the state assembly. In 2014 prior to that - the BJP increased vote share but seats were only two -- Darjeeling (S S Ahluwalia) and Asansol (Babul Supriyo).  







In 2021, the BJP emerged as the principal opposition party in West Bengal even as Mamata Banerjee returned to power for a third time in a row. The biggest achievement for the Lotus party was that it could replace the Left and the Congress was further marginalised. 


Both the parties/front which ruled the state for years since independence could not open account. The refrain earlier that the 'Bengali mindset' would not accept a Hindutva-based party was proved a misnomer. Hence, the 2026 battle is all about TMC and the BJP. 


The SIR made it a tougher contest for Mamata Banerjee than she had presumed even a few months back. 

On April 23, the first phase of polling saw huge turnout -- over 91 per cent statewide and around 96 percent in Cooch Behar in north Bengal. Next day, Amit Shah claimed - his party will win at least 110 seats out of 152 that went to polls. TMC leaders also screamed here and there - but they did not sound as much convincing. 



Last time high turnout in Bengal polls was 84.6 per cent in 2011 - the eventful year Mamata had ousted the communists. Her-Story was created of course - but after 15 years the same 'her story' has been taken on head on. 







But April 24th -- BJP's modern Chanakya - Amit Shah - gave a powerful message. The AAP of Arvind Kejriwal split in Rajya Sabha. Most unexpected protagonists like Sandeep Pathak quit the party leaving Kejriwal and many political players shell-shocked. 


In times to come; analysts will debate and explore - what was bigger shocker - the split in AAP's Rajya Sabha wing or the desertion of Ajit Pawar-Praful Patel duo from the Sharad Pawar camp in Maharashtra. 








The bigger message of AAP split is the timing. The political developments took place in the corridors of power in Delhi; the fallout would be less in Punjab but the message is more impactful for West Bengal. 

If AAP could be split -- why not Trinamool Congress ? 


A large number of 'floating voters' in Bengal for the crucial April 29 polls could be influenced. Reports of whispering is already there - if BJP makes up about 110-120 seats in total (in 294-member assembly); it would be the Lotus party who will form government. 





  

The number of legislators required to claim forming new government in West Bengal is 148.

In addition, the TMC has issues of its own. There is a strong cold war between old guard and the new generation leaders led by Abhishek Banerjee. A section of TMC would be totally disagreeable to work under the leadership of Abhishek as the new chief minister. 


Those who know Amit Shah - would always caution that his 15-day stay in Kolkata is not without good reasons. He has been meeting all kinds of protagonists - Netas and intellectuals. Kolkata also has good number of political go betweens and BJP-friendly business people and he has control over ED and other agencies. 


Personally for Amit Shah; there are higher stakes in Bengal. By 2027 or 2029; if Modi has to name him as his successor - during the summer of 2026; India may get an official deputy prime minister. 


If you have guessed it - well, the best option is to smile.








ends 

Diamond Harbour Model with a spin :::: Cracking whip on five TMC-friendly cops ::::: Election Commission still on move.... this time Abhishek's fiefdom Diamond Harbour ---report on additional SP Garai’s activities sought

EC deals Harbour blow: Suspension stick for senior cops on Abhishek turf The commission has directed the chief secretary to submit a report ...