"Kolkata to get Water Metro connectivity," says Chief Minister Suvendu Adhikari
The Enforcement Directorate (ED) summons Bengal Fire and Emergency Services Minister Sujit Bose alongside his wife, son, and daughter next week, escalating a probe into alleged recruitment rackets across the state's municipalities. Fresh off raids at Bose's office and residences last month, where sleuths carted away ledgers, laptops for ghost jobs in civic bodies from Howrah to Siliguri, the ED's directive paints a portrait of familial fingerprints on the fraud—Bose's kin allegedly as conduits for cash and clout in the 2020-2022 hiring sprees that sidelined merit for money.
The ED's envelope signals a shift from privilege to peril, with the wife facing questions on "household expenses" that ballooned suspiciously and the kids dragged from college and careers into the glare. With appearances slated for next week, this familial inquisition could cascade into arrests if alibis crumble, spotlighting Bengal's rot where civic seats sold.
For a state simmering with youth unemployment, where dreams defer to deals, the Bose saga is no footnote; it's a flare-up forcing reckoning on rulers who promised roti, kapda, and makaan but delivered only machinations. As ED's doors loom, Kolkata's corridors crackle: will this blaze backdraft on TMC, or will Bose emerge singed but standing? In politics' furnace, kin are kindling, and the fire's just flickering higher.