In the election atmosphere in Bengal, political tensions have once again escalated. A written complaint has been filed against TMC MP Mahua Moitra at the Mandir Marg Cyber Police Station in Delhi. The complaint alleges that an attempt has been made to create confusion among the public by spreading a “fake AI video” on social media.
According to the complaint, it is claimed that the viral video was used to tarnish the image of IPS officer Ajay Pal Sharma. The applicant alleges that the video may have been created using artificial intelligence (AI) technology. Its purpose, it is claimed, was to spread misinformation, create confusion, and influence the electoral environment.
BJP West Bengal unit says :
It is now evident that Mamata Banerjee’s theatrics in Kolkata were not a spontaneous outburst, but a carefully crafted diversion meant to shift focus away from what Trinamool’s cadre has been attempting across other parts of West Bengal.
While public attention remained fixed on Kolkata, troubling developments surfaced from Bardhaman. At the University Institute of Technology (UIT), a TMC-backed miscreant reportedly tried to scale the boundary wall to gain access to a strong room storing EVMs.
The incident was brought to light by BJP candidate Sanjay Das, raising serious questions about the intent and planning behind such an act. This is no ordinary location. It houses EVMs from five key Assembly constituencies: Bardhaman Uttar, Bardhaman Dakshin, Galsi, Ausgram, and Bhatar.
Taken together, these incidents are far from coincidental. The drama in Kolkata and the activities unfolding elsewhere reflect a broader, coordinated pattern. A pattern rooted in unease, driven by the growing realisation that the political ground beneath them is slipping.
This is the face of desperation. The Trinamool is aware that the tide has turned. The people of West Bengal have already delivered their verdict. May 4 will merely formalize the inevitable.
Following in his father's footsteps, Suvendu Adhikari began his political journey with the Congress and was elected as a councillor in the Kanthi municipality of East Midnapore. He joined Banerjee's Trinamool Congress in 1998 and entered the Bengal assembly as an MLA from the Kanthi Dakshin constituency in 2006.
A year later, in 2007, Adhikari made a name for himself and emerged as Banerjee's chief organiser when he spearheaded the Nandigram agitation alongside the Trinamool Congress chief. Violence had broken out in the area, also part of the East Midnapore district, during protests against the Left Front-led government's plan to create a chemical hub run by the Salim Group of Indonesia. The hub was part of a Special Economic Zone (SEZ), which would require the acquisition of 10,000 acres of land.
Adhikari led the Bhumi Uchhed Pratirodh Committee (Committee Against Land Evictions), which was at the forefront of the agitation. On March 14, 2007, an attempt to break up the protests led to 14 demonstrators dying in police firing, which sparked outrage across the state. The project was shelved soon after.
The Nandigram controversy and the protests against the Tata Motors plant in Singur in the neighbouring Hooghly district catapulted the Trinamool Congress to power in the 2011 Bengal Assembly elections, ending the Left Front's 34-year rule in the state.
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