Tuesday, April 28, 2026

BJP drags 'lynching and murder of Hindus' in Bangladesh ::: Says "similar incidents happened in Murshidabad" .... urge people to VOTE for Lotus outfit


Hindus in Bangladesh have been lynched, burned alive, shot dead, throat slit, in just a matter of 35 days. 


Similar incidents happened in Murshidabad last year when Islamist mobs attacked Hindu homes unprovoked. 


On the 29th, it is your chance to save West Bengal from becoming West Bangladesh! On the 29th, #BJPKeVoteDin --- BJP West Bengal






Among the cases in Bangladesh, the Lotus party referred to killing of Dipu Chandra Das.

On 18 December 2025, Dipu Chandra Das, a Hindu garment worker in Bhaluka, Bangladesh, was beaten, hanged from a tree. 

Other such cases include --Throats slit, Hindu freedom fighter, wife killed in Bangladesh; sons work as cops -- 

A 75-year-old freedom fighter (Muktijoddha) and his wife were found brutally murdered, their throats slit, at their home in Bangladesh's Rangpur. No case has been filed or arrests made over the murder of the elderly couple, whose two sons serve as police officers. The Awami League said the incident highlighted a surge in attacks on minorities under the interim regime of Muhammad Yunus.


Jogesh Chandra Roy and his wife Suborna Roy, were discovered by neighbours  


Hindu businessman Khokon Chandra Das dies after being assaulted, set on fire in Shariatpur district in Jan this year.













Home Minister Shri  Amit Shah has urged the people to come out and vote in large numbers on 29th April without any fear as ECI has placed CRPF jawans in each and every nook and corner of West Bengal. Even though BJP is winning this, Central forces are going to remain in Bengal for 60 days even after results!!  


BJP tweets : Remember before you vote on the 29th:

👉RG Kar

👉Hanskhali

👉Kamduni

👉Park Street 

👉Sandeshkhali 

👉URDU Imposition 

👉Broken Roads

👉Collapsed Flyovers 

👉Stalled Metro lines

👉Attacks on Tulsi Mancha and Maa Kali idols

👉26,000 SSC jobs lost 


"Remember the faces of your family members. Remember the good old days of the past. 

Remember that your safety and security is just one vote away. 

To return to the golden age of West Bengal again, #BJPKeVoteDin"







Murshidabad, West Bengal: ASP Majid Khan, says, "The situation is peaceful. Nothing has happened anywhere...". (April 23)  


The BJP also shared some 'Striking and terrifying similarities!


👉Dipu Das and Amrit Mondal - Bangladesh


Haragobinda Das and Chandan Das - West Bengal 

👉Iskcon was called Hindutva Terrorist outfit in Bangladesh and attacked.

Mamata had called Monks of Bharat Sebasram Sangha and Ramkrishna Mission as being politically influenced by the BJP. 


👉Bengali Hindus flee Bangladesh on a regular basis.

Hindus fled Murshidabad in 2025.


👉Chhayanaut in Bangladesh vandalised for being associated with Music. 

Singer Lagnajita being told not to sing “Jaago Maa” in West Bengal. 


👉Hindu temples and Pandals vandalised every year in Bangladesh.


Maa Kali idol beheaded in Kakdwip.


"Gradually West Bengal under the Mamata Banerjee regime has begun to increasingly resemble Bangladesh," the saffron party tweeted. 


"The fate of Bengali Hindus is being challenged every day! And in order to survive we must democratically topple this anti Hindu TMC!!"



Monday, April 27, 2026

On an 'unstoppable track' to capture West Bengal ??? ::::: BJP is giving its best so far to wrest power from Trinamool Congress !!

"Clearly, an energising football session with these youngsters!," PM Narendra Modi tweeted with snaps of him on football ground playing with Sikkimese youngsters. 











In another tweet, he wrote -- "Nothing like playing some football with my young friends in Sikkim on a lovely Gangtok morning! ⚽️".   Of course for a man of Narendra Modi's political instinct; interesting messages poured in as reactions. 


The visuals triggered an avalanche of reactions on social media. "Playing in Sikkim, scoring in Bengal," one user tweeted. Football has a special place in West Bengal, Sikkim and other north eastern states. There used to be a time when Kolkata's own Football League between clubs such as Mohan Bagan and East Bengal would throw the city crazy. 

Not to go far, in 2021, Mamata Banerjee's image sitting on a wheelchair and throwing a football poll rallies in West Bengal amid chants of "Khela hobe" is still being talked about.


The slogan resonated across different sections and proved to be a rallying cry for the TMC as it won a decisive two-thirds majority. Of course Modi is in Sikkim for the closing ceremony of Sikkim’s 50th Year of Statehood celebrations. 


In a public speech, the Prime Minister applauded the people and the state for serenity and enterprise and pointed out how the state has seen rapid progress. 




 

"Sir, this is PURE LEADERSHIP GOLD!  Seeing you energise these Sikkim stars at dawn isn’t just inspiring - it’s the spark India’s football future desperately needs," went another missive on X. 


The media have their own way of telling the story. 

'India Today' reported :

"PM Modi bends it like Beckham in Sikkim but message is for Bengal"

-- The timing of PM Modi's political play is hard to ignore. In Sikkim's neighbouring state, Bengal, where the second phase of polls is due tomorrow, football isn't just a game - it's part of the state's cultural identity, it notes. 


In the images, the 75-year-old Prime Minister (who will be 76 in September) is seen doing some warm-ups, dribbling past young players, and sharing light moments with the children. He is also seen taking a shot at the goal during a kickabout. 


On 50 years of Sikkim; another missive on micro blogging site is -- : "A journey defined by prosperity, culture, and progress. The vibrant spirit of the people here is a vital part of our vision for a #ViksitBharat. 

Proud to witness this transformation under PM #NarendraModi ji." 








  In the election season especially in the context of West Bengal; the BJP is giving its best so far to wrest power from Trinamool Congress. If one obvious factor that weighed in favour of the BJP and its leader Modi -- it's the assertive approach. 


ends 


Encounter specialist from Yogi land on poll duty in West Bengal ::: Cautions TMC candidate Jehangir Khan

"Agar badmashi kari..." -- an Uttar Pradesh style warning is heard in video that has gone viral



Election observer Ajay Pal Sharma, an encounter specialist from Uttar Pradesh, warned Jehangir Khan's relatives after complaints of "voter intimidation" in Falta. 

He also sought an explanation after finding 'more police personnel' than sanctioned numbers were provided for the candidate's security.
Ajay Pal Sharma, known as an encounter specialist, is currently deployed as a police observer in the state for election duty.







Ajay Pal Sharma is currently deployed by Election Commission as a police observer in West Bengal for election duty.

Of course, this year's election campaign which ended yesterday was witness to yet another high drama after an IPS officer on poll duty issued a blunt warning to the TMC candidate over alleged voter intimidation.

Sharma reached the area following complaints from residents that Jehangir Khan of the All India Trinamool Congress was allegedly threatening voters in the Falta constituency.

When Sharma arrived, Jehangir Khan was not present. Locals and even the local police did not initially disclose the location of his residence.

During a search, Sharma and his team traced the house and reached the spot.



Security forces carry out a flag march in Ballygunge of Kolkata


Ballygunj has substantial Muslim population and for a while the TMC toyed with the idea of fielding Mamata Banerjee from the constituency. 


Addressing Khan’s relatives at the residence, Sharma issued a stern warning. 

"Agar Badmashi Kari .... Make sure he (Jehangir) understands, if there are complaints of people being threatened, we will deal with it properly. If anyone indulges in wrongdoing or tries to harass voters, we will take strict action,” he said.

“Tell Jehangir that repeated complaints are coming that his people are threatening others. If that continues, we will take it up seriously. There should be no complaints later,” he added.


SECURITY COVER UNDER QUESTION


At Jehangir's residence, Sharma found 14 West Bengal Police personnel deployed. When he sought details from the local Superintendent of Police, he was informed that Khan had been given Y-category security with 10 personnel assigned. 

Sharma was irked over the discrepancy and issued a notice seeking an explanation for the additional deployment.


The development triggered sharp reactions. BJP leader Amit Malviya said Sharma had “set the tone” and “firmly read the riot act” to the family members of a close aide of Abhishek Banerjee.


“The message is loud and clear: the era of intimidation and impunity is over. Law and order will prevail,” he said.


The incident might have added to the already tense political atmosphere in West Bengal, with authorities under pressure to ensure a free and fair election. 

Officials have indicated that any complaint of intimidation or attempts to influence voters will be acted upon strictly as the campaign intensifies. 



 ccccccvvvv










This year the metropolitan Kolkata has seen the highest deployment, with 273 companies under its police jurisdiction.


The Election Commission has rolled out unprecedented security measures for the second phase of the assembly polls in West Bengal. 

First phase of polling was on April 23 (152 seats) and now for the remaining 142 seats polling will take place on April 23. 


Counting of votes will be done on May 4 along with elections held in Assam, Kerala, Tamil Nadu and Puducherry. 


Apart from using drones fitted with cameras for the first time ever in any election a total of 2,321 companies of central forces are being deployed across the state, supported by 142 general observers, 95 police observers, and 100 expenditure observers.




  

Pointers : 

Security personnel will be deployed constituency-wise to ensure voter safety and prevent disruptions.

Motorcycle patrols and increased security presence are planned for sensitive areas.

CCTV cameras will be installed at every polling station to monitor voting.


The Election Commission aims to restore confidence in the electoral process and ensure free and fair polling. Heightened security measures ensured high voters turnout, it is being claimed in many quarters. 


ends 


West Bengal campaign ends :::: Two dates would matter most to Bhabanipur and Mamata ----- April 29 and May 4 ::::: "Earlier only Muslims used to vote, this time Hindus will vote. Pata chal jaega"

 "Jodi paren, vote ta amay deben (If you can, please vote for me)," Mamata Banerjee said betraying unusual frail in her voice. Was it a deliberate strategy for an aging Mamata - who grew up in and around this constituency nurturing her eventful career. 








People or her party's campaign line has been well focused - calling her Ghorer Meye (daughter of own courtyard). Things should have been earlier -- like it has been all along since 2011. But 2026 is a different battle.


The BJP did not try political gimmick by fielding any celebrity. They banked on a serious contender - Leader of the opposition in the present assembly Suvendu Adhikari - moreover someone who has made Mamata taste defeat in Nandigram in 2021. 


Certain things started working against Mamata from the beginning. The electorate here offer a mixed and real-time cosmopolitan demography. 

This is what the Lotus party is now banking on.

There are substantial Gujaratis, Punjabis and Marwaris. There are also Odiya people (from neighbouring Odisha). These communities make about 40 per cent of voters.


My experience with Bhababipur goes back to 1990s - when my brother used to stay in a guest house - 'Maharashtra Bhavan'. His room/mess mates were from Bihar and Rajasthan. The food served here was a mixed lot. Not typically Bangla delicacies and the manager and most guest house staff were either from Odisha, Bihar and Rajasthan.

Of course, like the rest of Bengal, Bhabanipur too was a Marxist bastion then. But the cosmopolitan nature of the segment would always make it different and unique. 

On that score - it remains where only one slogan 'Ghorer Meye' may not work. The BJP had planned up well. They drew specific strategies to woo --

42-44 % of Bengali Hindus, 35% of non-Bengali Hindus, 

and nearly 25-28 % of Muslims, along with migrants from Bihar, Odisha, and Jharkhand. 


The Trinamool Congress was over confident initially. But as campaigning stepped up and on one occasion Mamata Banerjee left the stage - saying the BJP sloganeering about 100 metres away was disturbing her - the state's ruling party realised things could be difficult.

Thus, the TMC also intensified efforts trying to offset the BJP's advantage within the seat's Gujrati, Punjabi and Marwari communities. 


Mamata's trusted aide and Sickular face Firad Hakim, Kolkata's mayor, started meeting community leaders from each separate groups. But there are issues - which the BJP has already exploited ... it seems. 

Mamata's repeated rhetoric against "outsiders" have left a section of people in this segment aggrieved and hence they may vote in favour of Suvendu Adhikari.








Mamata Banerjee herself has led multiple rallies in Bhabanipur and padyatras, including one on April 25 from Sambhunath Pandit Street to Kalighat Road Crossing and another on April 26 covering a one-km stretch from Lansdown Crossing to Kalighat Fire Services Station. 


However, local BJP leaders say -- the foot march by Mamata did not yield expected outcome. They even claim that numerous times, Mamata was overheard asking her security people "odike lok acchey .. do we have more people ahead". 


Moreover, the TMC leaders have been trying to visit every home three times if necessary. It can be different teams calling them on. 

For their part the faceless BJP and RSS footsoldiers have been working in the constituency and a few more in Kolkata city for over a year now. The BJP/RSS carried out multiple meetings, informal family gathering and even surveys in Bhabanipur to break down the caste and community arithmetic, and their issues.

Accordingly, poll strategies were drawn out and even the decision on Suvendu Adhikari was taken based on feedback from these meetings.


As a result, the BJP war room had a "fair idea" where the Bengali-speaking voters are dominant, the areas where Muslims have the edge and where the non-Bengali traders hold sway. 


"We have tweaked the campaign strategy for each of these zones accordingly," said a local leader. 






"We have tasted droplets of blood ...," say BJP campaign strategists. And they have good reasons to say so. 



In 2019 Lok Sabha polls, party veteran Tathagata Roy had temporarily edged past Trinamool Congress nominee Subrata Bakshi by a narrow margin of 176 votes in the contest for the Kolkata Dakshin seat, with most of the BJP's votes coming from Bhabanipur.   


Secondly, the Trinamool’s lead margin in the Bhabanipur Assembly segment in 2024 Lok Sabha polls came down to 8,297 votes. 


In other words, the tradition Mamata bastion could be breached if played well. 

Everything said and done -- may be writing is coming on the wall or it's playing a sympathy-card.  


Kartik Banerjee looks tired and under stress. 


“There is uncertainty,” Kartik, a younger sibling of Bengal chief minister Mamata Banerjee, told The Telegraph Online sitting at his Kalighat Road office on Monday. 

A number of enthusiastic BJP karyakartas have welcomed the statement saying - "Khela to hoe gechhey (The game is then over in our favour)". 

Suvendu did not shy off .. and exuding confidence, he told TV journalists:  

"We will have bumper voting ... over 95 per cent people will vote. Earlier only Muslims used to vote (he meant TMC supporters), this time Hindus will vote. Pata chal jaega".

Taunting Mamata, he also said : "After SIR ... Mamata's core voters have come down to 30,000 and Sanatani voters now is over 1.25 lakh". 








ends 

Tempest in the Tea Cup ::: Rise of Mamata ... and 2026 may mark her end ..... Kejriwal's height of politics of ANARCHY

I OFTEN compliment Kerala for not discovering their version of Mamata Banerjee.


The 'Didi' or aapa and also Pishi to Bhaipo Abhishek;  Mamata Banerjee has contemporaries in Kerala politics like soft-spoken K V Thomas. Both came to Lok Sabha for the first time in 1984 – 8th Lok Sabha.


Prof Thomas, a committed Congress politician, often shared jokes with us on the intellectual demise of Marxism. But he would also say rightly, this does not entail the end of communism. 


Sadly even if it does – West Bengal had produced its illustrious Didi – who will ensure that ‘the communist directive for political action’ as was enunciated by famous Jyoti Basu will continue to orient the political passion of the masses. 




Bangla role models : Mamata and Jyoti Basu 




Between communists and TMC; West Bengal lived through 49 years - first 34 for the Left.


In 2011, Mamata Banerjee ousted the Leftists ending their 34-year-old monopoly on Bengal politics but with often harmful and yet contagious and menacing influence on Bengali mind. So much was Bengal pushed to an ideological bankruptcy that it did not mind embracing someone called Mamata Banerjee – a product of Congress backyards – as the alternative and perhaps their savior. 


Nothing changed on ground. Nothing could have changed. It has turned worse, according to many. 


I know of Trinamool Congress law-makers, who by 2015-16 would say privately, “I will win no doubt…that’s my good luck. But that is also the ill-luck of Bengal”. 



“…..eitai Bangla-r dur bhagya,” he had said precisely and perhaps did not lament – I suppose.










Therefore the moral of the story is 'triumph' over Communism in 2011 though was Mamata’s ‘Her-story’, it did not mean a paradigm shift of Bengal politics and administration. Like all greatness about Bengalis, Bengal and Maxism under that illustrious Bhadralok Jyoti Basu – who easily threw up adjectives like ‘barbarous’ on BJP – the Trinamool dispensation under Didi also bequeathed a series of conflicts for the people. 

Under her, women were advised not to go outdoors in night. Under her, Moharram was more sacred than Durga puja. Her MPs made unacceptable comments on Shiv-ling.


But for votes; there was Jagannath Dham. The indifference to ‘religious doctrines’ during the Left regime especially on oriental and Hindu values evaporated the faith and fear of value system.

This opened room for goondaism in gully politics, Puja pandals and in rural Bengal. 


It also heralded appeasement of a community calling themselves ‘minority’ and yet their struggle towards a better life never found emancipation in the administrative rule book of Jyotism and later under Buddhadeb Bhattacharjee. Under Mamata, Muslims were just tools to garner votes.


Moreover; there was innate parochialism. Frogs in the pond.

This meant only Bengalis could criticise Bengal. L K Advani as India’s Home Minister could not make any comment on Kolkata traffic.


Khushwant Singh also was gheraoed – after he made some remarks on Rabindranath Tagore’s skills on writing fictions.












In other words, Bengal and Bengalis developed problems for themselves. Came in BJP - the rise of right wing pro-Hindutva politics has taken many in surprise. Now what happens to the people and their state after May 4-5 when votes will be counted is anyone's guess.  


Arvind Kejriwal's anarchy


The Left and the Ultra Left have had a good student in Arvind Kejriwal. He came up the ladder of anti-corruption crusade wherein Anna Hazara's image and agitation in 2011 was used, exploited, dusted and then forgotten. Like the Leftist leaders who would use Shantiniketan bags or Mamata her bathroom sipper; Kejriwal had his muffler and trademark 'half shirt'. 


The reality is Sheesh Mahal. 

On April 27, 2026 - Kejriwal is using another anarchist model but giving it a facade of Gandhian Satyagraha. He says he will not appear before the Delhi High Court judge Justice Swarana Kanta Sharma. The legal system, the legal fraternity and Indian sickularism should not entertain this kind of 'protest'. 


The AAP leadership has lost face after the split in its Rajya Sabha wing. The judge declined to bow out of the hearings. Hence, this drama from a man -- who took pride in saying "mein anarchist hoon'.  


Now, he says -- "My hope of getting justice from Justice Swarana Kanta is shattered. Therefore, I have decided to follow Gandhiji's Satyagraha. I have made a decision based on the voice of my conscience. I will reserve the right to appeal Justice Swarn Kanta's decision in the Supreme Court."  



On April 20, the Delhi High Court dismissed Arvind Kejriwal, Manish Sisodia and others' plea seeking recusal of Justice Swarana Kanta Sharma in the excise policy case. 


If Kejriwal's tantrum is entertained, tomorrow every terrorist and Naxal arrested will want a judge of their choice. This ought to be stopped and discouraged forthwith. 


He should face the law. 








BJP Delhi President Virendra Sachdeva has countered former chief minister. He says, 


"Arvind Kejriwal is invoking Mahatma Gandhi’s name, and I want to ask him, did Gandhi ever advocate promoting liquor, acting as a middleman in the liquor trade, or earning commissions through liquor shops? 


Why is he taking Gandhi’s name? The values Gandhi upheld are opposite to what Arvind Kejriwal is doing...".  


The influence of ultra-left anarchy is always far more dangerous than on the face value.


It is characterized by a violent rejection of all hierarchical structures, authority, and the state, aiming to immediately dismantle capitalism and social hierarchies. 


The Left-wing anarchism has historically been linked to political violence, bombings, and assassination attempts. 










ends 

Sunday, April 26, 2026

"BJP under Mr Modi is unlike any other party in India — past or present," says P Chidambaram ::::: "BJP is like the Communist Party of China"

Senior Congress leader and former Union Minister P Chidambaram says that 


"The BJP under Mr Narendra Modi is unlike any other party in India — past or present. Its goal is not to win elections as often as possible; its goal is to win elections and remain in power forever".  


In that sense, he argues, the Lotus party is is like the Communist Party of China. 


In his weekly column to 'Indian Express', under the title - "A decisive moment in history", the veteran leader says:

"The lesson of the 2024 LS elections is that despite many parties forming the I.N.D.I.A. bloc, they could not defeat the BJP. With give and take, the I.N.D.I.A. bloc has the potential to expand itself. If the parties do not learn the lessons, many small parties will fall by the wayside and may disappear".










Chidambaram, who was jailed for a while in 2019 by the Modi government, said--

"Mr Narendra Modi, prime minister and de facto leader of the BJP, is an ideologue who accepts the RSS’ view of India but, at the same time, is totally practical to realize that the RSS’ goal can be achieved not through electoral victory alone but through carefully crafted steps."


The Communist Party of China (CPC)’s road to power was through a brutal war against the Japanese invaders and, after Japan’s surrender in 1945, through a bitter civil war  against the Kuomintang (KMT) in 1949.  


The CPC has remained in power since.





He also writes:

"Mao Zedong proclaimed a one-party state in China...

India’s Constitution adopted in 1950 allows multiple political parties and mandates periodic elections and a peaceful transfer of power at the Union-level and the State-level. This is the crucial difference between China and India."

He maintains -

"At the inception, the Jan Sangh, and later the Bharatiya Jan Singh and, in its present form, the BJP, believed in the Constitution of India. 

It was nurtured as a democratic party and positioned on the right of the political spectrum. It strove to distinguish itself from the Indian National Congress that occupied the space on the left-of-centre. 


The BJP remained a democratic party through the years under the leadership of Shyama Prasad Mookherjee, Deendayal Upadhyaya, A.B. Vajpayee and Mr L. K. Advani.  


However, the BJP’s political guru, the RSS, had — and has — a different view of the polity and political architecture of India: RSS believes that India must be a country with one-language, one-culture, one political party and, to the extent feasible, one religion."






On this backdrop, Chidambaram argues --- "Mr Narendra Modi, prime minister and de facto leader of the BJP, is an ideologue who accepts the RSS’ view of India but, at the same time, is totally practical to realize that the RSS’ goal can be achieved not through electoral victory alone but through carefully crafted steps".  


"The Constitutional, legislative and administrative steps taken by the Modi government since 2014 must be viewed through this prism. 

Mr Modi’s strident advocacy of the Citizenship (Amendment) Act and the Uniform Civil Code, the passage of the J & K Reorganization Act, the creative interpretation of Article 73, Article 162 and the provisions of Parts XI, XII and XIV of the Constitution, and the determined effort to implement One Nation One Election (ONOE) are all steps calculated to usher in the so-called Viksit Bharat, he notes. 

on Modi's tenure, Chidambaram says:

"Mr Modi was ascendant from 2014 to 2024.  He confidently expected the people of India to give his party 400+ seats in the Lok Sabha in the 2024 election, but he suffered a major setback — the people gave him only 240 seats, short of even a simple majority of 543 seats.  

All his efforts since 2024 are intended to recover lost ground before 2029.  


Suppose the BJP had succeeded in passing the Constitution (131st Amendment) Bill, 2026. In the guise of reservation of seats for women, the Bill would have pushed through delimitation and gerrymandering." 


The new laws and their implementation would have rendered the southern states irrelevant in the governance of the country, he says.


Chidambaram also maintains: 

"The lesson of 2024 LS elections is that despite many parties forming the I.N.D.I.A. bloc,  they could not defeat the BJP which emerged as the single largest party with 240 seats.  


With give and take, the I.N.D.I.A. bloc has the potential to expand itself and pose a serious challenge to the BJP.   


Eventually, two grand Alliances in a LS election will prevent the monopolization of power by the BJP at the Centre, create the space for an alternative political choice, and sustain the secular, democratic and Republican Constitution of India."










Tavleen Singh writes: Notes from a hellhole (also in 'Indian Express') 


"India may not be a hellhole but for the longest time we have not paid attention to why so many of our countrymen flee to foreign shores. 


Our problems have accumulated over many decades and cannot be blamed on a single political leader or party."


Under Trump, it has stopped being that ‘shining city on a hill’ but I know from Punjabi farmers who work on construction sites in New York that they make more money than they did from farming, she notes.




Tavleen goes further :

"When the leader of the free world calls your country a ‘hellhole’, it gets you thinking. I admit that I spent a longish while brooding over the insult before sitting down to write this piece. 


There were so many Indians venting their rage on social media that I thought at first that it was Donald Trump himself who used the ‘hellhole’ word for our ancient land. 

It came as a relief to see that the ugly diatribe against India and Indians had been authored by someone else.


"Having said this, it also needs saying that if Trump had not posted it on social media, nobody would have paid attention to the harangues of a racist, two-bit radio host. 



Modi : Boat Ride in Kolkata 




Why Trump posted it remains a mystery. 


"What is clear is that his ill-starred war against Iran and his failure to find an exit strategy is taking its toll. 

He has done as much damage to his own country as he is doing to the world but there are enough columnists, movie stars and world leaders saying this already."


"So, let’s get back to the ‘hellhole’ jibe," runs the column.


"It cheered me up a little that India and China were put in the same basket because having travelled to China more than once, I can report that it is no hellhole.  


It cheered me up also that the author of the diatribe seemed motivated by real anger that the doors of Silicon Valley were closed to white people like him. 


And open wide for people from India and China. So, the rantings of this white supremacist happened because he could not believe that brown and yellow people from ‘hellhole’ lands should be doing better in the United States than white people."







She goes on:

"Now let us discuss if there is any justification for India to be called a hellhole. 


"We Indians do not like foreigners to say bad things about us but in our private moments we admit, albeit in whispers, that there must be something wrong if millions of our countrymen are ready to flee our shores to get to countries that offer better jobs and a better life. 


"When Narendra Modi first became prime minister, he made a speech to a gathering of overseas Indians in Paris in which he said he wanted to build a country that nobody would wish to leave. 

Has he succeeded in this? Clearly not. So why not?" -- wonders Tavleen Singh.


"Some things have improved. There are better highways, better airports, better rail services, better rural amenities by way of welfare schemes that supply subsidised gas, food, electricity and water. And certainly, rural sanitation has improved dramatically but it is not these things that our countrymen go in search of in foreign lands. 


Some squander their savings on people smugglers to enter the United States as ‘ghuspetiyas’. Illegal immigrants. 


Link


"Among those who choose the ‘dunki’ route there are not just poor people but middle-class Indians willing to pay huge sums to get to the United States."


"It should worry us that it is from two of our more prosperous states — Punjab and Gujarat — that there are the most immigrants, both legal and illegal. 

What is it that the United States offers them that India does not?"





Courtesy - Indian Express) 


ends 


Abhishek's turf Diamond Harbour under scanner by EC :::: ‘Partisan’ Cops Under Lens

 By NIRENDRA DEV

— The Election Commission has intensified its crackdown in West Bengal’s politically sensitive Diamond Harbour, widely seen as the stronghold of Trinamool Congress leader Abhishek Banerjee, by ordering strict action against police officers accused of partisan conduct.






EC Scans Diamond Harbour Model: ‘Partisan’ Cops Under Lens


In an unprecedented move during the ongoing Assembly elections, the poll panel directed Chief Secretary Dushyant Nariala to submit a detailed report on the activities of Additional SP Sandip Garai to his cadre-controlling authority, the Union Home Ministry. This marks the first such directive in the current election cycle, signalling heightened scrutiny.


Simultaneously, the Commission ordered the suspension of five officers, including Garai, SDPO Sajal Mondal, and key police station heads from Falta, Diamond Harbour, and Usthi. Departmental proceedings have also been initiated against them for allegedly acting in favour of the ruling Trinamool Congress.




                                      

Joy of Voting!  (Senior couple of Bankura in front of the district mascot proudly displaying their inked fingers )  


The EC also issued a warning to Diamond Harbour SP Ishani Pal for failing to ensure neutrality among her subordinates.


‘Diamond Harbour Model’ Faces Test


Diamond Harbour, located on Kolkata’s southern fringes, has long been projected as a governance showcase by Abhishek Banerjee, encompassing infrastructure, welfare delivery, and political management—often dubbed the “Diamond Harbour model.”  


However, the Commission’s sweeping action suggests it views the seven Assembly segments under this Lok Sabha constituency—Falta, Diamond Harbour, Satgachia, Bishnupur, Mahestala, Budge Budge, and Metiabruz—as highly vulnerable to electoral malpractices.


A senior EC official remarked that urgent intervention was required to ensure free and fair polling in the region, underscoring the seriousness of the allegations.  






In a parallel development, the EC also ordered the suspension of the officer-in-charge of Hingalganj police station in North 24 Parganas after examining reports of alleged bias and links with “local elements.”


Bhabanipur Turns  Political Flashpoint


Even as the EC tightened oversight, political tensions escalated in Bhabanipur, where Chief Minister Mamata Banerjee and BJP leader Suvendu Adhikari held rallies within close proximity, triggering clashes between supporters.Politics


Banerjee cut short her address, citing disruptions and slogans from a nearby BJP gathering. “It is insulting and humiliating… I will not be able to address you now,” she said before leaving the stage, promising to return the next day.


The BJP, led by figures like Amit Shah and party IT cell head Amit Malviya, accused Banerjee of losing composure amid signs of electoral decline. 



Timeless Democracy : 1971 cartoon tells a story 'retold' 






TMC leaders, however, termed the incident a deliberate attempt to disrupt their campaign and evoke intimidation.  Electoral Stakes Rise


Bhabanipur, a key Kolkata seat, is witnessing a high-stakes contest between Mamata Banerjee and Suvendu Adhikari. 


The contest has gained further intensity after the deletion of nearly 51,000 voters—around 21% of the electorate—following the EC’s Special Intensive Revision.


Meanwhile, internal dissent within the TMC appears to be surfacing. Party MLA Bayron Biswas publicly expressed fears of defeat in multiple constituencies, citing concerns over strongroom arrangements and alleged irregularities.


The Election Commission’s assertive stance in Diamond Harbour and beyond indicates a zero-tolerance approach toward perceived bias, setting the stage for a fiercely contested and closely monitored electoral battle in West Bengal.




courtesy - The Raisina Hills 


ends 


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