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Regular-article-logo Friday, 22 November 2024

Two voices on Bengal governor’s peace meet

The Opposition accused Trinamul for the failure to reach a breakthrough

A Staff Reporter Calcutta Published 13.06.19, 07:08 PM
Keshari Nath Tripathi with Jay Prakash Majumdar, Partha Chatterjee, Somen Mitra and Mohammad Samil at a meeting regarding the post-poll violence in the state, in Calcutta, on June 13, 2019.

Keshari Nath Tripathi with Jay Prakash Majumdar, Partha Chatterjee, Somen Mitra and Mohammad Samil at a meeting regarding the post-poll violence in the state, in Calcutta, on June 13, 2019. (PTI)

The Bengal governor’s office said in a statement on Thursday that all parties had agreed to restore peace at a meeting on the post-poll violence, but the Opposition parties said no breakthrough could be reached because of the Trinamul Congress.

A statement issued by governor Keshari Nath Tripathi’s media secretary said Partha Chatterjee of Trinamul, Jay Prakash Majumdar of the BJP, Mohammad Samil of the CPM and Somen Mitra of the Congress had agreed on the following points:

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  • Law and order should be enforced properly and values and rights of democratic institutions should be protected
  • Violence should be stopped immediately
  • Peace and harmony should be restored
  • The media should contribute to maintaining peace
  • No one should deliver any provocative speech
  • Efforts should be made to maintain the democratic and social fibre of the state.

The Opposition, however, accused Trinamul for the failure to reach a breakthrough.

Bengal BJP vice-president Majumdar said: “The governor’s initiative remained inclusive as the Trinamul representative was non-committal.”

Chatterjee did not speak to the media, unlike the other leaders who attended the meeting.

“He didn’t have the authority to comment on any issue without taking Mamata Banerjee’s permission. Then why was he sent to the meeting?” Majumdar asked.

Mamata had said earlier in the day: “Yes, he (Tripathi) has called a meeting…. Law and order is a state subject, not your subject. You can call for a cup of tea. I am sending my representative there. Go, have a cup of tea, come back.”

Mohammad Salim of the CPM blamed Trinamul for the violence in Bengal since last year’s panchayat polls.

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