Bengal violence: IE editorial points to ‘TMC bombs’, Telegraph says central forces ‘invisible’

The violence in Bengal seems to be unrelenting with reports of fresh clashes on Monday.

WrittenBy:NL Team
Date:
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Meanwhile, the Hindustan Times featured the news as the lead on its front flap with a report headlined “Violence continues in Bengal, several areas to vote again”. On page 9, it had another report headlined “‘No CAPF to stop miscreants, we watched helplessly’: Bengal poll officials”. According to the report on the inside page, polling officials claimed that supporters of a particular political party were involved in malpractices such as booth capturing and damaging of ballot boxes.

A day before the elections, the paper also carried an editorial on “why violence persists in Bengal”, pointing to “three reasons”.

“The first is historical. The violent antecedents of pre-Independence politics in the province and the upheaval caused by the carnage of Partition left deep scars on the socio-political psyche of the state…as the state slowly transformed into what political scientist Dwaipayan Bhattacharya terms a party society, these old fault lines bubbled back to the surface, and were used adroitly to capture ground.”

“The second is political. In a populous and largely rural state, the Left adopted land and resource mobilisation as an emotive issue, and used rural units as instruments of control, not just for elections but also for everyday life. In a state where rural bodies were up and running decades before the 1993 reforms operationalised panchayati raj across India, parties used the rural governance machinery as extensions of the party arm…when the Bharatiya Janata Party first found a toehold in the state, it did so by capturing panchayats in 2018. No wonder that the TMC is keen to consolidate its power this time around.”

“And the third is mathematical. As political scientist Neelanjan Sircar wrote on this page, contrary to popular perception, parties don’t pay an adverse cost for unleashing violence. In fact, there exists a positive relationship between seats that went uncontested (a good proxy for areas that saw violence meant to stop Opposition candidates from filing papers) and strike rates in polls. This is the instrumental reason for the persistence of political violence – it works.”

On the deployment of forces

In the run-up to the elections, several papers had noted the significance of the Calcutta high court’s order to bring in central forces. “The State Election Commission (SEC) initially appeared reluctant to heed calls by Opposition parties to bring in central forces to boost security arrangements. A perceived delay in identifying sensitive areas resulted in the Calcutta High Court ordering the poll body to ask for and deploy central forces,” noted an editorial in the Hindu on June 23. 

“The controversy flags the issue of political violence, which is quite endemic to West Bengal. Each election sets off a round of violence and demands for central forces. The federal principle that law and order is under the State’s domain is often strained and tested at such times. The High Court had ordered a CBI investigation into incidents of serious violence after the last Assembly election in 2021. A truly independent election watchdog and a sense of responsibility among all political parties are necessary to preserve the purity of the election process.”

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