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Mamata Vs CBI: West Bengal CM's Protest Enters Day 3, SC To Hear CBI Plea Today

Most opposition parties rallied behind Banerjee’s direct confrontation with the Modi government, even as the BJP called it an “alliance of corrupt”.
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West Bengal chief minister Mamata Banerjee’s sit-in protest against CBI’s bid to question Kolkata police chief in the Sharadha chit fund scam cases entered day three on Tuesday, with the Supreme Court on Monday saying it will hear CBI’s plea in the matter today.

A political firestorm raged on Monday as Banerjee’s sit-in protest against CBI’s bid to question Kolkata police chief in chit fund scam cases entered the second day. Banerjee declared that her agitation to save the “Constitution and country” will go on and she was ready to face the consequences.

The CBI on Monday alleged in the Supreme Court that it has found “substantial material” against Kolkata Police Commissioner Rajeev Kumar in connection with the Saradha chit fund scam case but he was not cooperating in the investigation and ignoring the summons.

“Trinamool workers took to streets burning effigies of Prime Minister Narendra Modi and BJP chief Amit Shah and blocked trains, while the BJP lined up its top leaders to step up the counter-offensive against Banerjee and other opposition leaders.”

Narrated the sequence of events of Sunday evening in which its sleuths were rounded up by the West Bengal police, CBI said it was seeking a direction for Kumar to immediately surrender and make himself available before it for investigation into the scam.

CBI said Chief Minister Mamta Banerjee along with the DGP, additional commissioner of police sat on dharna or sit-in at around 10 pm Sunday in Kolkata and as such a conduct by the officials in uniform points to “complete anarchy prevailing in Kolkata and West Bengal”.

The agency justified its action to reach the residence of Kumar saying it has substantial material to exercise its power of arrest without warrant and the Commissioner of Police is bound to comply with law of the land.

Meanwhile, most opposition parties rallied behind Banerjee’s direct confrontation with the Modi government, even as the BJP called it an “alliance of corrupt” and Home Minister Rajnath Singh told Parliament that developments in West Bengal were indicative of a “breakdown of the Constitution”.

Trinamool workers took to streets burning effigies of Prime Minister Narendra Modi and BJP chief Amit Shah and blocked trains, while the BJP lined up its top leaders to step up the counter-offensive against Banerjee and other opposition leaders.

The ripple effect of political tremors in West Bengal were felt in several state capitals, as Banerjee’s combative posturing on the issue drew support from several regional satraps trying to sew up an anti-BJP alliance ahead of Lok Sabha polls, expected in April-May.

Refusing to budge, Banerjee held her Cabinet meeting at the protest site and also gave police gallantry awards there.

““This is a satyagraha and I’ll continue (it) till the country is saved... Constitution is saved"”

“This is a satyagraha and I’ll continue (it) till the country is saved... Constitution is saved,” the firebrand TMC boss said at the protest site.

The tense standoff between the CBI and the Kolkata police for the second day echoed in Parliament and led to a washout of the proceedings following opposition protests.

“There may be breakdown of Constitution in West Bengal...under the Constitution, the central government has been vested with the power to maintain normalcy in any part of the country,” Singh told Lok Sabha.

“Whatever happened on Sunday indicates constitutional breakdown,” he said.

Singh also sought a report from Governor Keshari Nath Tripathi which was promptly sent by Raj Bhavan.

“I do not have any grudge against any individual. But I am angry over the way institutions are being destroyed and misused,” Banerjee told the gathering at the protest venue.

She said it was her government that arrested Saradha chairman Sudipta Sen and claimed Rs 250-300 crore was returned to the duped depositors.

The alleged ponzi scams at Saradha and Rose Valley groups are at the centre of what has become a major political controversy now, as the BJP leaders have alleged that the ruling party leaders in West Bengal have been among major beneficiaries of fraudulent collection of money.

Allegedly, these schemes were being run without necessary regulatory approvals and collected nearly Rs 20,000 crore from lakhs of investors in West Bengal and neighbouring states, through what is commonly known as ‘chit funds’.

Several TMC leaders including parliamentarians like Kunal Ghosh, Srinjay Bose, Sudip Bandyopadhyay and Tapas Pal, and state minister Madan Mitra were arrested for their alleged links with the two groups.

“Today you are labelling those who helped arrest the culprits as thieves. You are calling Rajeev Kumar (Kolkata Police Commissioner) a thief! Whose money has he taken? You are calling me a thief! Whose money have I taken?

“If you are labelling people who are honest as thieves without any evidence, then I will definitely stand by their side. And for that if I need to give up my life, then I am ready to do that but I will not compromise,” she asserted.

Claiming that the CBI team had knocked on Kumar’s door without a warrant, Banerjee said, “I have fought all through my life but never given up. I am ready to face any consequences.”

The failed attempt by the CBI to question Kumar in connection with the Saradha and Rose Valley chit fund scams on Sunday became the latest flashpoint between the BJP-led Centre and Banerjee, one of its bitter critics. The CBI has accused Kumar of destroying evidence related to the two fraud cases.

A CBI team was bodily prevented from entering Kumar’s residence by police personnel, bundled into vehicles, and detained. Police contingents also descended on CBI premises in Kolkata, as a furious Banerjee rushed to Kumar’s residence before beginning a dharna opposite landmark Metro Cinema.

As political temperature soared, Banerjee told her supporters to keep the demonstration peaceful and not to burn any effigies.

“Save the Constitution, save the federal structure, save the police force, save the Indian Administrative Service and all ranks of civil service from disaster,” read the banner that fluttered on the dais Banerjee has made her home since Sunday night.

Support for her poured in from far off leaders ― DMK chief M K Stalin in Chennai, Andhra chief minister N Chandrababu Naidu in Amaravati and former prime minister H D Deve Gowda in Bengaluru.

Odisha’s ruling party BJD, which had hitherto kept silent over the development, also threw its weight behind Banerjee.

“We are not a banana republic...,” BJD leader B Mahtab said, adding the CBI was becoming a “political stooge and political weapon” in the Centre’s hand.

Congress leader Mallikarjun Kharge charged that the government was using the CBI as a weapon to finish the Opposition and put in place an autocratic regime.

Delhi Chief Minister Arvind Kejriwal alleged the “Modi-Shah duo” were trying to “murder” democracy.

NCP leader Sharad Pawar, at whose residence leaders of opposition parties met, said what has happened to Mamata has happened in Delhi to Kejriwal also.

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This article exists as part of the online archive for HuffPost India, which closed in 2020. Some features are no longer enabled. If you have questions or concerns about this article, please contact indiasupport@huffpost.com.