West Bengal’s political temperature soared as ex-BJP MP Arjun Singh lambasted Chief Minister Mamata Banerjee, cautioning the Muslim community against misplaced loyalties amid escalating crises. His Tuesday remarks dissected voter revisions, security breakdowns, and communal biases.
The SIR drive aims to purify voter lists, Singh explained, but hinges on administrative zeal. In Bengal, top brass stonewalls it, turning BLOs into pawns of graft and peril.
Security is collapsing, he charged. BLO killings, media assaults—government denial rings false. ‘No fear of law prevails,’ Singh said, deeming it intolerable in any democracy.
Banerjee’s double standards on religion irk him deeply. Pro-Islam slogans pass muster; ‘Jai Shri Ram’ sparks fury. This faith-based polarization poisons society, he argued.
To Muslims: Mamata’s grip means ongoing struggles. Anti-BJP bias clashes with scheme availing—ironic amid their dire straits. Hindu targeting escalates, with CM mum on Bangladesh parallels.
As polls loom, Singh’s tirade amplifies calls for accountability, exposing fault lines in Bengal’s polarized landscape and governance voids.