NIA searches Saokat Molla’s home and party office, son questioned in Bhangar blast case
Chaos descended on Kakdwip in West Bengal's South 24 Parganas district yesterday late afternoon, when a drunken local man involved in Kali idol vandalism row spiraled into a massive protest that choked a vital national highway, stranding ambulances and commuters in a storm of stones and outrage. Narayan Halder, son of Bhupati Halder, a local has been involved in this incident, confirms West Bengal Police. The standoff intensified with protesters refusing to yield despite police pleas stones soon flew, endangering everyone which police officers scooped up and shielded in a van to preserve its sanctity amid the melee. Officers, outnumbered but resolute, prioritized the divine over the discord—ferrying the idol to safety while dodging projectiles and coordinating with stranded commuters begging for passage, their voices a chorus of frustration from delayed ambulances to weary travelers.
Within hours of the fray, intelligence led a swift raid to Halder's doorstep; the 40-something son of Bhupati Halder crumbled under questioning, confessing his alcohol-fueled folly and offering a tearful apology, confirms West Bengal Police. The dust settled on two FIRs—one for the heart-wrenching Kali idol vandalism row, the other for the unruly highway blockade—as cops pondering over CCTV footage and accomplices, insisting no political strings attached here, just a localized lapse in reverence, confirms West Bengal Police.
Halder's remand to court marks the probe's first chapter, but the ripple effects linger: calls for tighter security, warnings against viral misinformation twisting the tale into broader conspiracies, and a poignant reminder from police brass that Maa Kali's honor is non-negotiable, etched into Bengal's soul. As forces maintain a vigilant peace in this sensitive belt, the episode underscores the tightrope walk between faith and order, urging to channel devotion through dialogue rather than disruption