Booth Level Officers (BLOs) under the banner of ‘BLO Adhikar Raksha Committee’ stage a protest over alleged excessive
workload during the ongoing SIR of electoral rolls, outside Chief Electoral Officer’s (CEO) office, in Kolkata on Tuesday. (PTI)
KOLKATA :
WEST Bengal Chief Minister Mamata Banerjee on Tuesday announced that her Government will provide a financial assistance of Rs 2 lakh each to the families of 39 people who, she claimed, have died in the state due to “SIR-induced panic”, including cases of suicide.
Thirteen others who fell ill during the SIR exercise including three booth-level officers (BLOs) allegedly burdened by “excessive workload” would also be given Rs 1 lakh each, she said.
The Chief Minister, citing Government assessments, said the rollout of SIR on November 4 has triggered widespread fear and distress among sections of the public.
“Till now, 39 ordinary citizens, including four BLOs, have died due to the SIR panic, including suicides.
Their families will be provided financial assistance,” she said after a review of the state’s 14-year development record at the state secretariat Nabanna. Banerjee added that 13 others were currently under treatment after collapsing or falling critically ill during enumeration-related duties.
The state has also recorded allegations of deaths of BLOs owing to “work pressure”. Banerjee said four such fatalities had been reported, and the Government had already provided Rs 2 lakh each to the families of four officials.
According to officials, the first reported suicide linked to SIR-related panic occurred on the inaugural day of the exercise, when Pradip Kar, a resident of Khardah in North 24 Parganas, ended his life.
Since then, deaths reported during the enumeration phase include nearly half due to suicide, with the rest attributed to cardiac arrest and brain strokes, sources said.
The Chief Minister accused the Centre of “weaponising” the revision process and said her Government would stand by those who suffered.
“We will not let people be traumatised or intimidated. The state will support every affected family,” she asserted.
Don’t behave like British: Mamata slams Centre over SIR, asserts commitment to secular politics
KOLKATA,
Dec 3 (PTI)
WEST Bengal Chief Minister Mamata Banerjee on Tuesday tore into the BJP-led Centre over the SIR of electoral rolls, accusing it of behaving like the British rulers by imposing directives on the state, and vowed that her Government would neither allow detention camps nor practise communal politics.
She was addressing a programme at the state secretariat Nabanna, in which she listed her Government’s work over the last 14-and-a-half years.
Claiming that the SIR process had been triggered at the behest of the BJP to “save its vote bank”, Banerjee alleged that the Centre was attempting to “disturb the states” under the guise of electoral reforms.
“I do not run detention camps in Bengal. We do not torture people. We don’t disturb others, why is the Centre disturbing the States?” she asked.
Banerjee said the Union Government must not act like the British rulers.
“I want to tell the Centre: do not behave like the British and forcefully impose anything on us. If you have something to say, tell the state directly. We are committed to the Constitution,” she said, adding, “I do not practise communal politics. I practise secular politics. For me, all religions are the same.”
The remarks come at a time when political temperatures in West Bengal have risen sharply over the SIR, with the BJP and TMC locked in a bitter war of words.
The SIR exercise, mandated by the Election Commission of India (ECI), aims at revising electoral rolls by verifying entries, identifying deceased or shifted voters, and ensuring updated records ahead of the 2026 Assembly polls.
However, the process has triggered protests by booth-level officers (BLOs) over workload, street demonstrations by political leaders, and mud slinging between the TMC and the BJP.
Banerjee, also the TMC supremo, reiterated her long-standing charge that the BJP was attempting to misuse the ECI machinery to influence voter lists.
The Chief Minister also sought to portray her Government as the principal defender of constitutional values and federalism.
“Bengal does not discriminate. We treat all communities equally. This is not a Government that divides people. This is a Government that protects everyone,” she said, adding that the state would “resist any attempt” to unsettle the social fabric.
Over the past week, the CEO’s office in Kolkata has witnessed scenes of chaos, with protesting BLOs engaging in altercations with the police over what they call “inhuman workload”.
The TMC has accused the BJP of trying to “manufacture tension” around the SIR to create a political narrative ahead of the polls.
Banerjee also took an indirect swipe at the Centre’s citizenship-related legislations, stating that Bengal would “never support anything that pushes people into detention camps or renders them stateless”.
The TMC has consistently opposed the Citizenship Amendment Act (CAA) and the NRC, calling them instruments of discrimination.
“Let me make this clear: there will be no detention camp in Bengal. Nothing will be allowed that harms any community. We follow the path shown by the Constitution, not by divisive politics,” she said.
Soon after the Chief Minister’s remarks, the BJP hit back, accusing her of “peddling falsehoods” to divert attention from the TMC’s alleged involvement in maintaining “ghost voters” in the electoral rolls.
Leader of the Opposition Suvendu Adhikari said Banerjee was “scared” of a clean-up of the voter list.
“The SIR is an ECI-mandated, nationwide process. Why is she afraid? Because thousands of fake and illegal voters have been protected by the TMC for years,” he alleged.
Adhikari said comparing the Centre to the British was “an insult to the democratic structure”.
“It is Mamata Banerjee who runs Bengal like a private estate. The BJP does not need to learn democracy from her. She must explain why her party is resisting a transparent voter verification process,” he said.
Calling Banerjee’s “secular politics” claim “hypocrisy”, the BJP leader alleged that the TMC had indulged in “appeasement politics” for over a decade.
“Her Government selectively protects certain groups for electoral benefit. She should stop lecturing about constitutional values,” he said.