Mukul Roy brings serious charge against Bengal Govt
Kolkata, July 03 (HS): Senior BJP leader Mukul Roy has charged the West Bengal government with allegedly hatching a conspiracy to falsely implicate several senior party (BJP) leaders in a bid to put them behind bars as they failed to compete with them politically after conceding so many seats (18) to them in the Lok Sabha poll.
Bringing this serious charge against the state government, particularly against the state intelligence bureau, for allegedly hatching such a conspiracy unlike anywhere else in the country, to harass and embarrass BJP leaders, Roy released a list of these targeted leaders and claimed that the Criminal Investigation Department (CID) had been asked to set up non bailable cases against a number of senior BJP leaders.
Among them apart from he himself, are Kailash Vijaybargiya, state BJP President Dilip Ghosh, National Secretary Rahul Sinha, state party Vice President Jayprakash Mazumdar, Sayantan Bose, General Secretary Pratap Banerjee, Barrackpore MP Arjun Singh, Asansol MP Babul Supriya, Hooghly MP Locket Chatterjee and former East Midnapore SP Bharati Ghosh, Roy said.
Besides preparing the ground for issuing non bailable cases against each of these senior party leader and kept them ready in writing, the CID in association with the police, had been asked to prepare video clips on each of them before sending them to the respective police stations for action under false charges, Roy alleged here this evening.
Claiming that a large number of party workers had already been implicated by the ruling Trinamool Congress and the state police under false charges of possessing contraband in a bid to put them behind bars for at least three years, as per law, Roy further claimed that however, for them the government had been preparing a different game plan of which all of them were aware of.
Now, it remains to be seen whether there is any truth behind such claim and serious charges against the Mamata Banerjee government by BJP and how the party leaders would be implicated in ‘false charges’ restricting their movement and political activities within the state.