CM Mamata Banerjee made serious allegations against BJP, said- BJP wants to cancel the elections and impose President’s rule.

New Delhi. West Bengal Assembly elections are approaching. Chief Minister Mamata Banerjee on Thursday accused the Bharatiya Janata Party of conspiring to cancel the upcoming elections and impose President’s rule in the state. Addressing an election rally in Sagardighi, CM Banerjee claimed that the BJP was behind the incident in Malda, where villagers took seven judicial officers hostage on Wednesday. He said that the administration is not under my control right now. Law and order is being controlled by the Election Commission. The CM alleged that the commission works as per the instructions of Home Minister Amit Shah. All the officers starting from the Chief Secretary and the Home Secretary have been changed. He alleged that BJP plans to cancel the elections and take over Bengal by force.

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West Bengal Chief Minister Mamata Banerjee said that BJP has tried to provoke people in many ways. Their plan is to cancel the elections. If this happens, no one will have the right to vote. He will capture Bengal by force. The Election Commission has taken away my powers. A super President’s rule has been imposed with the help of the Home Minister and the Governor. The West Bengal CM claimed that she had no prior knowledge about the Malda incident and she came to know about it from a journalist. He admitted that the present Chief Secretary has not contacted him even once. Banerjee said that I do not know who was behind yesterday’s incident in Malda. I don’t have any information. The present Home Secretary has not called me even once. I came to know from a journalist that the judges have been surrounded. There is dissatisfaction among the people in Malda, Murshidabad and North Dinajpur. People have become victims of BJP’s tactics. A major political storm has erupted in West Bengal as villagers took hostage seven judicial officers, including three women, in Malda district on Wednesday. The standoff was triggered by massive deletion of names from voter lists under the ongoing Special Intensive Revision (SIR) process. The incident was part of a larger wave of protests that brought Malda to a standstill throughout the day; Protestors blocked roads on national and state highways and major rural routes in at least five assembly constituencies. Responding to the issue, the Supreme Court today described the Malda incident as a brazen and deliberate attempt to obstruct the administration of justice.

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