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Former Ghatal Municipality Chairman and current TMC councillor Bibhash Chandra Ghosh arrested by Ghatal police today afternoon, accused of forging a high-profile TMC letter signed by Abhishek Banerjee to orchestrate a brazen extortion racket that's allegedly netted him over a lakh rupees from unsuspecting locals. What started as whispers of shady dealings—Ghosh flaunting the bogus document on social media, claiming it anointed him to a plum party post—quickly escalated into a full-blown police probe after multiple victims came forward with complaints of being coerced into paying up for "favors" or influence. Snatched from his Ghatal haunts and grilled at the local station, the 50-something leader faces serious charges of forgery and extortion, with cops poring over digital trails and witness statements to unravel how he weaponized the fake missive on official TMC letterhead. This isn't just a one-off scam; it's a stark expose of the underbelly of small-town power plays, where a single forged signature can fleece folks and fracture party loyalties, leaving
Ghatal's tight-knit community reeling and the district TMC brass scrambling to distance themselves from the mess.The arrest unfolded like a scene from a gritty thriller: plainclothes officers swooped in mid-afternoon, cuffing Ghosh amid a flurry of denials from his camp, before bundling him off for overnight questioning. Victims painted a picture of desperation turned deceit: one recounted shelling out Rs 20,000, believing Ghosh's "appointment" gave him sway over municipal perks. For the TMC, already navigating post-election tightropes in rural strongholds, this hits them badly—exposing how rogue elements can tarnish the party's grassroots image just as development drives gear up. Ajit Maity, the Ghatal TMC district president, didn't hold back in his public dismay, slamming Ghosh for possibly tumbling into a "bad circle" and insisting no one in their right mind would dare fake a nod from Abhishek, the party's golden boy.
No street protests have erupted yet, but the internal row simmers hot, with loyalists decrying the embarrassment and rivals from BJP and CPI(M) sharpening their barbs for the next electoral skirmish. For everyday Ghatal residents, this saga underscores the human cost of corrupt clout: dreams deferred and pockets picked in the name of politics. With police vowing to chase every lead, from accomplices to additional victims, the coming days could widen the net, forcing TMC's top echelons to confront how far a forged flourish can fray their fabric. In the end, it's a gritty reminder that in Bengal's bustling backwaters, power's ink must run true—or risk washing away the trust it claims to build.