People's Democracy(Weekly Organ of the Communist Party of India (Marxist) |
Vol.
XXVIII
No. 50 December 12, 2004 |
THE Trinamul Congress-sponsored bandh (shut-down) in Bengal failed to evoke any response from among the people. The wage earner, the employee, and the kisans all over the state ignored the bandh. Attendance in government as well as private offices equalled the norms seen on other working days. A large number of buses, trams, as well as trains ran. The metro in Kolkata ran as usual. Several schools and the Kolkata University continued with scheduled examinations.
The
fact that the Trinamul Congress was losing its support base was clearly seen
when the lumpens of that party indulged in mayhem around the area surrounding
Mamata Banerjee’s residence in order to force shopkeepers to down shutters and
to stop buses from plying. Several
bombs were exploded to scare away pedestrians going about their daily business.
Anil
Biswas, state secretary of the CPI (M) said while felicitating the people for
making the adventurist and opportunistic bandh
call a flop, said that the recent judgement of the Kolkata High Court on banning
bandhs, and the controversy the
judgement raised allowed some people to participate in the bandh as a means of registering their protest against the court’s
decision. Biswas dubbed the
Trinamool Congress bandh as completely
unreasonable and politically motivated.
Describing
the bandh called by the Trinamul
Congress as smacking of irresponsibility, Bengal chief minister Buddhadeb
Bhattacharjee said that three bandhs
called by the Trinamul Congress, the SUCI, and the CPI(ML) represented
aberrations in the long tradition of struggles and movements of the masses of
the people.