Calcutta HC orders Bengal government to maintain law and order after post-poll violence
Calcutta HC orders Bengal to maintain law and order

The Calcutta High Court on Thursday directed the newly-elected BJP government in West Bengal to strictly maintain law and order at the ground level. The directive came after Mamata Banerjee informed the court that the police had been inactive during the post-poll violence, while also asserting that Bengal is not a bulldozer state in the context of ongoing demolition drives against illegal structures.

The court further instructed the police to guarantee the safety of those who had fled their homes fearing post-poll retaliatory violence and to facilitate their secure return to their properties, regardless of political affiliation.

The writ petition was filed by Sirsanya Bandyopadhyay, a TMC candidate in the recently concluded assembly elections and son of Kalyan Banerjee, alleging widespread violence against party workers and attacks on TMC offices following the declaration of the 2026 assembly poll results on May 4. The interim order was passed by a bench comprising Chief Justice Sujoy Paul and Justice Partha Sarathi Sen, which also directed the state to file its affidavit-in-opposition within three weeks and granted an additional two weeks for a reply, while keeping open the question of the maintainability of the TMC's PIL.

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Assisting petitioner's counsel Kalyan Banerjee while dressed in a lawyer's robe, Banerjee told the court that at least 10 people had been killed, around 150-160 TMC offices vandalized, and nearly 2,000 incidents of violence reported after the polls. She alleged that FIRs were not being registered and claimed that women, children, and minorities were being specifically targeted. Out of ten dead, six are Hindus. They are not allowing FIRs to be lodged. In my family, 12-year-old girls are being threatened with rape, Banerjee argued.

Arguing that criminals were taking the law into their own hands, she said even people accused of unauthorized construction were entitled to be heard before demolition. She questioned police inaction, asking, People are entitled to be heard even if you are demolishing an unauthorized structure. Criminals are taking law into their own hands. Police should prevent crime. After an incident has happened, will they not investigate?

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