A late Monday night police baton charge on farmers, women and Trinamool Congress leaders at Singu... Land war brings Trinamool,

A late Monday night police baton charge on farmers, women and Trinamool Congress leaders at Singur, about 45 km from here, and the forcible removal of and assault on party chief Mamata Banerjee and her companions, saw the party leaders converging in Kolkata Tuesday morning at the foot of the statue of Mahatma Gandhi.

At their protest Tuesday, Banerjee and her party leaders were joined by senior Congress leader and Information and Broadcasting Minister Priya Ranjan Dasmunsi at the venue on Mayo Road in Kolkata, in a show of opposition unity not seen for nearly a decade.

'I strongly condemn the attack on women at Singur. It is barbaric, and not about Mamata only. I would ask even Communist Party of India-Marxist leader Brinda Karat to condemn the attack on women, including Mamata,' said Dasmunsi, signalling the whole-hearted involvement of the Congress in the movement.

Banerjee has alleged that she was also baton charged, while some Congress leaders claimed she was threatened with a revolver on her chest and her clothes were torn.

The Trinamool has called a road and rail blockade between 11 a.m. and 12 p.m. Tuesday bringing Kolkata to a standstill. It has also called a 24-hour Bengal bandh (shutdown) on Oct 9, which has now been backed by the Congress.

'We support the bandh. Not only on moral grounds - and we will observe it simultaneously. Will our women be subjected to torture by police and our farmers cheated - and I keep silent? Never,' Dasmunsi said.

'We hear that the injured in Singur are in hospital but in hand cuffs. So we are holding a symbolic road blockade. The way the police abused Mamata, the way her clothes were torn and (she was) manhandled, it is unprecedented. It cannot be without (Chief Minister) Buddhadeb Bhattacharya's support,' said Trinamool legislator and senior leader Sougato Roy.

The Congress and the Trinamool Congress will call on President A.P.J. Abdul Kalam to discuss the issue of fertile farmlands being acquired for industrial projects. They have planned a protest rally Wednesday in Kolkata.

'We had asked the chief minister to sit on the table and discuss the issue. But he was adamant and went ahead with grabbing fertile multi-cropping farmlands from the peasants,' said Congress leader Manas Bhuyian.

On Sunday, the state government had declared the 1,000 acres of land at Singur as vested and started acquiring the farmlands and distributing cheques - a move stalled by Mamata Banerjee as she joined the movement with a hunger strike.

Late Monday night, Banerjee and Trinamool militant leaders like Sonali Guha were assaulted and physically removed from the site by police, who also reportedly resorted to a merciless baton charge, injuring several women and mediapersons.

'Our stance on Singur is similar (to Mamata's). We are against acquisition of fertile farmlands for industry. Our leaders are there,' said state Congress leader Pradip Bhattacharya.

The Congress has been emboldened by Saturday's statement of Congress chief Sonia Gandhi that she disfavoured acquisition of fertile farmlands for setting up industry.

The CPI-M described Banerjee's agitation as an attack on the state's 'development'. West Bengal Industry Minister Nirupam Sen denied a news report that every member of the dispossessed farmer's family would receive a job in the proposed Tata Motors unit.

'It is not true that jobs would be provided to every member of family. We said we are trying to ensure that the local people, especially women, are involved in the overall economic development in the area and given a livelihood. Nothing specific was discussed,' Sen clarified.

This is cache, read story here

admin – Tue, 2006 – 09 – 26 11:00