[ad_1]
“There was no police there at that time. I am going to Kolkata now. At least 4-5 people pushed me intentionally. I am in pain, my feet are swollen. There was no SP and local police at that time. This attack on me is intentional,” Banerjee said about the incident.
She was immediately taken to her temporary residence at Reapara, Nandigram.
She felt ill, her leg looks badly injured, said a source.
Her security team is now escorting her back to Kolkata by road where she may have to be taken to a hospital. She may be taken to a hospital on her way to Kolkata, sources said.
Sukhendu Sekhar Ray, Trinamool MP, who was accompanying Banerjee explained: “At about 6.15 pm, when she (Banerjee) was about to leave Birulia Anchal after performing Puja in a temple, a few unknown persons pushed her towards the car and forcibly shut the door, as a result of which she sustained injuries in her left leg and also suffered severe pain in the waist. She, thereafter, left for Kolkata to get proper treatment.”
The ruling AIADMK has released its second list of 171 candidates for the upcoming Tamil Nadu assembly elections.
CPI(M)’s Minakshi Mukherjee has been named as the Left-Congress-ISF alliance’s candidate from the high-stakes Nandigram seat. West Bengal Chief Minister Mamata Banerjee has filed her nomination from the seat.
Two Tollywood actors Rajshree Rajbanshi and Bonny Sengupta have joined the Bharatiya Janata Party, and two more TMC MLAs are set to exit the Mamata Banerjee-led party in a big push for the saffron party.
West Bengal Chief Minister Mamata Banerjee filed her nomination papers from the Nandigram seat, while her rival and BJP candidate Suvendu Adhikari will hold a show of strength, as the stage is set for the Battle Royale in the constituency. Adhikari, whose name was announced as the BJP candidate from the seat on Saturday, will file the nomination on March 12. For 50-year-old Adhikari, the contest in Nandigram will be a fight for his political survival as he had vowed to defeat Banerjee by over 50,000 votes in the seat or quit politics. Adhikari won the Nandigram seat in the 2016 assembly election, while another TMC candidate emerged victorious from the constituency in 2011.
The former minister had quit the TMC and resigned from the assembly last year to join the BJP after having differences with the state’s ruling party. On the other hand, Banerjee will contest the Nandigram seat for the first time after relinquishing the Bhowanipore constituency in Kolkata, from where she had won twice. The TMC supremo has rented a house in Nandigram and will campaign from there. Elections in Bengal, poised to be a stiff contest between the TMC and the BJP, will be held in eight phases between March 27 and April 29. Votes will be counted on May 2.
Banerjee on Tuesday came down heavily on BJP’s attempt to divide Hindu voters and said those playing divisive politics based on religion should be given a befitting reply in the upcoming assembly polls from Nandigram. Addressing booth-level TMC workers in a veiled attack against Adhikari, Banerjee said, “It is not that easy to divide people based on 70:30 (Hindu and Muslim vote share) ratio. For us, all are equal. We don’t differentiate people based on calculation and religion.”
She accused Adhikari of playing the Hindu-Muslim card and said that she told him not to teach Hindu dharma as she belonged from a Brahmin family, “I would like to tell him that I belong to a Brahmin family and he should not play the religion card with me. Don’t teach Hindu dharma to me,” she said.
[ad_2]
Source link