People's Democracy(Weekly Organ of the Communist Party of India (Marxist) |
Vol. XXXVII
No. 29 July 21, 2013 |
BOOTH CAPTURING,
ARMED ATTACKS AND RIGGING MAR FIRST TWO PHASES
Large-scale
Plunder of Votes
in
Panchayat Elections
Rape
of Democracy, alleges Left Front
From Our
Special
Correspondent
in Kolkata
FREE run of
armed ruling party gangs, large-scale booth capturing, forcible
false votes,
blockade of villages, violent attacks on opposition candidates
and their
polling agents, active connivance of state police with
miscreants. West Bengal
panchayat elections, after first two phases of polling, can
easily be summed up
as an “unprecedented plunder of votes”.
In the first
phase, voting took place in West Midnapur, Bankura and Purulia
on July 11.
In continuation
of the terrorisation, which was going on before the election,
TMC gangs roamed
freely in the villages in these three districts, threatening
voters not to come
out of their houses, particularly in Bankura and West Midnapore.
In West
Midnapore, booth capturing was rampant in Pingla, Dantan,
Gopiballavpur,
Shalboni, Nayagram, Chandrakona, Debra, Ghatal, Keshpur,
Garbeta. In many
areas, the booth capturing started
after 1 pm. For
example, 79 booths were
captured in Ghatal and more than 50 in Debra. In Gopiballavpur,
more than 30 booths
were captured out of 98. TMC miscreants chased away CPI(M)
polling agents from
most of these booths and the polling officials were forced to
keep silence
under threat. In Pingla, CPI(M) leaders were attacked with sharp
weapons and
many were injured.
In Bankura,
there was no semblance of fair elections in 11 out of 46 seats
in Zila Parishad
(District Council). Thousands of people were denied their voting
rights in
Indas, Taldangra, Bishnupur, Joypur, Kotulpur, Mejia and
Saltora. Booths were
captured, particularly after 12 pm. However, in southern parts
of the district,
mainly tribal areas, people came out in numbers to vote.
In Purulia,
there were sporadic incidents of violence. In a major attack,
CPI(M) activists
were injured in Barabazar. However, people came to vote in this
district
despite fearful atmosphere.
In the second
phase,
on July 15, the attacks were more violent, more unconcealed and
more
widespread. Voting took place in Burdwan, East Midnapore and
Hooghly districts
in that phase. Large numbers of seats in these three districts
were already
snatched away by the ruling party as Left Front candidates were
not allowed to
file nominations or were forced to withdraw in the face of
brutal terror. In
the rest of the seats, TMC gangs wrecked havoc by widespread
booth capturing,
never witnessed in the state for decades.
In Burdwan, TMC
brought gangs from outside the district. They infiltrated in the
district in
the last two days before polling from the neighboring districts.
TMC started a
full-fledged attack on booths in almost all areas in the
district from the
morning. In Jamuria, Sheikh Hasmat, the husband of a CPI(M)
candidate, Monowara
Bibi, was killed in a bomb attack at Madhudanga gram panchayat.
Enraged
villagers chased the miscreants and one of them, was beaten to
death. Even
after this incident, numerous booths around this area were
captured by TMC.
In Rayna,
widespread attack took place. Many booths were captured. CPI(M)
district
council candidate Suprava Karfa was arrested when she complained
about rigging.
TMC gangs captured many booths in Galsi, Aushgram, Kalna,
Khandaghosh,
Mangalkote, Ketugram. At the end of the day, 890 booths were
fully or partially
rigged and captured in Burdwan district alone.
In another
incident, symbolic of what happened throughout the district,
ballot papers were
snatched from the hands of Chayarani Tah, mother of murdered
CPI(M) leader and
ex-MLA Pradip Tah in a booth in Burdwan Sadar. A TMC activist
snatched the
ballot and stamped it within the booth. This person is an
accused in the murder
case.
Wherever the
villagers tried to resist, the state police came in support of
the miscreants
of the ruling party. In many places, villagers were arrested.
In East
Midnapore, elections turned into sham in many areas. In
Nandigram, no other
political parties are allowed to function for the last two
years. In some of
the seats, ruling party faced challenges from independent
candidates. TMC
activists gheraoed booths and obstructed voters from reaching in
many areas. In
some areas, the independents, mostly TMC rebels, suffered the
attacks. In
Sonachura, in Nandigram, the vote boxes and tables were brought
outside the
booth and polling took place in open. This was done to prevent
any voter from
casting votes against TMC.
CPI(M) and
Left Front agents were chased out of polling booths in Egra,
Ramnagar, Patashpur,
Khejuri, Panshkura, Moyna. In Kanthi, home to father-son MP duo
of TMC,
villagers were attacked so that they do not go to polling
booths. Nearly 450
booths were captured in this district. Central forces were kept
idle and TMC
gangs roamed freely. Hundreads of booths witnessed looting of
votes, openly.
In Hooghly,
already 362 booths saw no voting at all. TMC ‘won’ in all three
tiers there
‘without contest’. In Dhanekhali, Polba, Tarakeswhar, Arambagh,
Haripal, TMC
armed gangs created terror with the help of police. They stormed
booths, beat
up CPI(M) polling agents, and stamped ballots in one after
another booth. In
Arambagh alone, 136 booths were totally under ruling party
control. In Salepur
in the same subdivision women came out of their homes and
clashed with
miscreants after CPI(M) polling agent was forcefully kidnapped.
CPI(M)
candidates were attacked in many areas. In Uttarpara, CPI(M)
candidate in
panchayat samiti Shuvra
Chatterjee was
attacked and she suffered head injury. Piyush Dhar, another
candidate in
Debanandapur was grievously attacked. In Nabagram area, a bike
borne gang went
from booth to booth and chased away people.
In the second
phase nearly 1500 booths were captured in the three districts.
The state
administration virtually kept aside the central para military
forces. They were
not deployed in booths. Most of the central security forces were
stationed in
the block office. Some of them went to main roads but not in the
villages. The
state government was opposing the deployment of central forces
from the very
beginning. Central forces were sent to the state under the
direction of the
Supreme Court. However, they were forced to remain inactive. In
the second
phase central forces were not deployed in 88 per cent of booths.
Biman Basu, Left
Front chairman, expressed anguish in the manner voting right of
the people was
snatched. He told presspersons, “Our worst apprehensions came
true. The chief
minister herself continually threatened election commission and
the opposition.
Ministers openly threatened that the opposition parties would
not be allowed to
operate freely. Those terror tactics were implemented in the
first phase. It
accentuated in the second phase. Thousands of people were not
allowed to vote.
Booths were captured. Security forces were forced to remain
idle. This is a
rape of democracy.”