Articles by "Kamalpur"
Showing posts with label Kamalpur. Show all posts



Kumarghat/Kamalpur (Tripura), Feb 17: Even as the formal campaigning for crucial elections to the Tripura assembly ended, hours before the voting on Sunday party cadres and supporters from both CPI(M) and BJP camps are moving around and are more than busy passing good words about their respective parties. 
In Kumarghat town, a key nerve centre in north Tripura, many BJP supporters were heard talking enthusiastically about their neo-confidence in this year’s elections. “Gram pahare mukher bol, phutbey ebar padda ful (From hills and valleys, there is only one slogan it is time for Lotus to bloom),” said one shopkeeper – cautious that his name should not be quoted as time for ‘campaign’ has already ended.
“There have been lawlessness and therefore people are talking about change. The CPI(M) regime saw various corruption cases like Bishalgarh Block scandal wherein a block official was also involved,” said another voter in the area.
Similar whispering and informal chats were heard even in Kamalpur town and Marachara area of Surma reserved SC constituencies. The CPI(M)’s sitting legislator Bijay Laxmi Sinha is facing a stiff fight from BJP’s Manoj Kanti Deb, a former Congressman, in Kamalpur.
In Surma constituency, Ashish Das of BJP is pitted against sitting CPI-M legislator Anjan Das.
The Left supporters dismiss speculation about a possible BJP-IPFT government and say the CPI-M hold has been so strong in at least 40 constituencies in 2013 polls that despite ‘erosion’ of support base – the communist candidates will sail through comfortably.
“Our party’s return to power is a foregone conclusion. Manik Sarkar is immensely popular and this nervousness was reflected in Prime Minister Narendra Modi’s personal attack,” says Diptesh Jaimatia, a voter in Surma assembly constituency. 
However, a woman CPI-M worker in Tribal para under Kamalpur segment Archana Pal cautions against ‘complacency’. 
“From beginning of campaigning in this year’s fiercely contested polls, our party leadership has cautioned cadres about the need for eternal vigil,” she says. 
Quoting party leader Amal Chakraborty, she says, “In Left scheme of electoral strategy complacency is considered the biggest weakness in fighting the rivals”.
However, she admits in some pockets in Kamalpur and Surma assembly segments, the CPI-M has suffered ‘desertion’ among party workers.
“In some segments, these are matter of concern,” says another pro-Left voter Nayan Chanda. But he also hastens to add that the BJP poll managers may get a shock on the outcome day as the voters in the state are “both revolutionary and committed”. “Most voters will not be influenced by anti-people reactionary vested interests,” he says.
But a BJP supporter sought to counter the Leftists’ claim and say in many smaller hamlets in particular people have decided to ‘discharge’ their historic duty and vote out the communists. 
“In my constituency not only the local CPI-M leaders even their relatives have been found indulging in corruption. Such a system should end this time,” says Dinesh Das of Durgachowmuni locality in remote Dhalai district. UNI


Kamalpur/Khowai (Tripura), Feb 12: Amid the heat and dust of Tripura's most fiercely contested election, a large number of CPI-M cadres and supporters have shifted allegiance to the right wing BJP and many of them now openly attribute Sitaram Yechury-Mamata Banerjee axis during noteban protest for the scenario today. 
"The BJP was always ambitious to make deeper penetration into Tripura. But the communist orientation of Bengali middle class had made things difficult. But once Sitaram Yechury-Mamata Banerjee decided to forge an anti-Narendra Modi alliance during demonestisation protest. It heralded a new era," says traditional Left supporter Ranjan Das, a resident of Kamalpur announcing his decision to vote for BJP this year.
Others agree readily. In fact challenges before the BJP for deeper penetration into Tripura which houses substantial Hindu migrants from the then East Pakistan (now Bangladesh) were too many and complex. The BJP and also the RSS strategists always realised that unlike the cow-belt northern state Uttar Pradesh where BJP could easily push the Ram Temple and other pro-Hindutva issues, in Tripura they would need 
to take up more mundane issues - jobs, women empowerment and industrialisation.
The saffron leaders always tried to reach out to intellectuals and middle class in Tripura essentially seeking to break the umbilical cord between the voters and the pro-Marxist intellectualism, but with little success.
Even the six former Congress MLAs - who joined BJP on the eve of polls and are now contesting on saffron outfit ticket - generally believed that real alternative to the communists could be from 'secular establishment' of Indian politics. It had to be Congress or Trinamool Congress.
"We all had rested immense faith in Trinamool Congress and Mamata Banerjee. We thought here was a party that will fight the leftists. But once Mamata Banerjee and Sitaram Yechruy had tele talks and decided to protest against noteban, we felt orphaned," Ashish Shah, BJP candidate in Bordwali seat in Agartala, told.
This sentiment is generally agreed by many former Left cadres too -- who have now decided to endorse the BJP.
Namita Das, a former CPI-M worker in a panchayat area in Khowai district, has now decided to support BJP.
"Sitaram Yechury-Mamata Banerjee coming together showed our fight on the ground would be always artificial.
I will fight against Trinamool Congress or Congress in my village, but up there in Delhi or Kolkata there will be a deal," she says rather angrily.
The voters in Tripura like West Bengal – due to intellectual affinity and perhaps due to overdose of Marxists' politics are essentially “pro-Left”. 
Local analysts say in nearby Assam, the BJP's acceptability had started long back even as the party might have faced initial hurdles in 1980s and 1990s - but those were more from a linguistic point of view as the saffron party those days used to be seen more as a 'pro-Hindi' language party. 
But in West Bengal and also in Tripura - the BJP strategists realised it time and again that even upper caste Hindus do not necessarily relate to the 'Brahminical appeal of the RSS'.
"Even the alleged kidnapping of RSS cadres from Tripura by militants during the Vajpayee government in the centre could not fetch any political dividends to the BJP or helped its organisational growth," says Jharna Pal, a resident of Khowai assembly segment.
But once the Congress or for that matter Trinamool Congress supporters and workers realised while others would never fight the Left tooth and nail, they looked forward towards BJP and were "convinced" that the "Bengali Hindu middle class intellectuals" can also support BJP.
"The election outcome in Tripura with Bengalis voting for BJP would be significant and can possibly also influence the electoral arithmetic in West Bengal," says Jharna Pal.
Tripura has an overwhelming presence of Bengali Hindus – who had to flee the then eastern Pakistan (read now Bangladesh) during partition in 1947 and also in 1971 during the Bangladesh war of liberation. However, rural BJP workers like BJP women leader from Kamalpur township, Sipra Das says, "There is a gradual change and many young voters are readily rejecting the Left ideology".
But the Marxists are trying to take the battle to new realms of power and political games. Like most political parties – on the verge of losing ground – the Marxist leaders in the state too find it “distasteful” to admit that things are going against them.
Hence, there are already multiple strategies in hand. One of them from the Left camp being - playing up the fear psychosis, if BJP comes to power along with Indigenous People's Front of Tripura (IPFT), there could be "division" of the state and Bengali Hindus can be again rendered 'homeless'. UNI


Agartala/Kamalpur, Feb 12: Believe it or not; the Marxist 'honest face' and Tripura Chief Minister Manik Sarkar's name does not figure in the list of 10 candidates with lowest assets in the February 18 state polls.
According to a report from the Association of Democratic Reforms (ADR), in fact none from the CPI-M figure in the list of 'Ten candidates with lowest assets'.
Khagendra Reang from Raima Valley constituency and hailing from little known Tripura People's Party (TPP) is shown in the survey as the "poorest" with moveable assets of Rs 100 only.
Other candidates who figure in this list are either from TPP, Independent or from Tipraland State Party (TSP). 
However, among the established and well-known parties the name of Trinamool Congress nominee Kuheli Das Sinha figure in this list figure at number 5.
Das Sinha is shown with an moveable asset of Rs 839 only.
The CPI-M has often said that its Chief Minister Manik Sarkar's probity doesn't have much moveable and immovable properties.
Not long ago, he was also given the tag of 'poorest Chief Minister'.
The Union Home Minister Rajnath Singh in his campaign rally at Barjala play ground on February 3 sought to puncture the Marxists’ claim that they have a clean Chief Minister in Manik Sarkar. 
Mr Singh had also drawn a parallel between Mr Sarkar and Dr Manmohan Singh - under whom the UPA government had faced corruption charges.
"I want to tell the Chief Minister here (reference to Tripura CM Mr Sarkar) that if you are Mr Clean then why did audit report refer to alleged corruption cases. Why these are there?," the Union Home Minister has said.
Other BJP leaders also accuse Mr Sarkar of pretending to be 'Mr Clean'. Bishwabandhu Sen, BJP candidate from Dharmanagar, told UNI: "We have a clean white-kurta pyjama man going around in the state...but he is not as clean as he claims".
In the survey report of ADR, it is also claimed that 22 per cent of nine Indigenous People's Front of Tripura (IPFT) candidates face criminal cases.
The break up also shows 22 per cent of 51 BJP candidates facing criminal cases and 18 per cent facing 'serious' criminal cases.
Among the CPI-M nominees, two per cent face serious criminal cases while four per cent of them face criminal cases.
Out of 297 candidates analysed, the report shows 35 of them - that is 12 per cent are crorepatis.
From among the 51 BJP candidates, 18 are shown as crorepatis while nine out of 59 Congress candidates are shown with assets more than Rs 1 crore. BJP's ally IPFT has only one candidate with properties more than Rs 1 crore while among the 57 CPI-M candidates - only four of them are crorepatis. UNI