No eviction drive in Burrabazar & College Street, clarifies KMC Commissioner
In West Bengal's Kalna, a routine SIR drive into a political powder keg. In the Uttara Goara Mondalpara area of Haat Kalna Panchayat, locals stumbled upon around 27 SIR enumeration forms meant for South Dinajpur district's Balurghat voter rolls, littering the road scattered all over. These weren't just any scraps; they hailed from Jagannathbati in South Dinajpur, part of the Election Commission's Special Intensive Revision (SIR) drive to scrub and refresh Bengal's voter list. Kashinath Mondal, a BJP Block Level Agent (BLA) cruising by, who was picking them up with what he called civic zeal—only to face a neighborhood standoff that escalated faster than a monsoon downpour.
Alerted residents summoned Kalna Police Station, who swiftly arrived and detained the BJP BLA. This roadside revelation isn't mere mishap; it's a snapshot of the SIR's high-stakes scramble, where forms flying free expose the fragile thread between fair elections and foul play. TMC accused BJP for this turmoil. Meanwhile, the administration's early verdict leaned toward oops over conspiracy. Probe underway, stressing safeguards to keep voter verification watertight.
The incident ripples through Bengal's electoral undercurrents, where SIR's noble aim of clean rolls clashes with the grit of ground-level glitches and grudge matches. In a state where democracy's paperwork packs as much punch as poll promises, this form fiasco underscores the urgency of transparency—lest scattered sheets sow seeds of deeper distrust, turning revision into division.