Protests Over Electoral Roll Revision Disrupt Normal Life in Several Districts
Protesters burned tyres, blocked roads and held silent marches in Malda, Jalpaiguri, Cooch Behar and Purba Bardhaman, where voting will be held on April 23.
A day earlier, seven judicial officers, including three women, who were engaged in the electoral rolls revision exercise, were gheraoed in Malda district's Kaliachak. They were rescued by security forces after several hours.
Alleging large-scale deletion of voters' names, the protesters also blocked National Highway 12, connecting Kolkata and Siliguri, on Wednesday.
Hours after the Kaliachak incident, which led the Supreme Court of India to describe West Bengal as "the most polarised state", protesters blocked NH-12 again, this time at Mangalbari area of the district on Thursday morning.
They set tyres on fire and erected bamboo barricades on the road, bringing traffic to a halt. A similar agitation was held at Jadupur in the English Bazar area.
"We have all the necessary documents, yet our names have been struck off the voter list. We want immediate rectification," a protester said.
The blockade at Mangalbari continued for nearly four hours. It was lifted after Malda Additional District Magistrate Sheikh Ansar Ahmed reached the spot and assured the protesters that their grievances would be looked into.
A police officer said: "When police personnel attempted to lift the blockade, they were attacked by protesters. Several police vehicles were vandalised, and a driver sustained head injuries."
"Security has been stepped up in the area," he added.
In Jalpaiguri's Maynaguri, locals blocked National Highway-27 at Husuldanga from Thursday morning, alleging that many genuine voters had been marked as "deleted" or kept under "adjudication" after the SIR exercise.
The blockade, since morning, brought the highway traffic to a standstill, with long queues of goods-carrying vehicles seen on both sides of the road.
Holding up placards, people raised slogans against the Election Commission of India and demanded that their names be put back on the electoral rolls.
Security forces, along with administrative officials, reached the spot and spoke to the protesters, but they refused to relent. The blockade on NH-27 was lifted hours later after prolonged negotiations.
Another group blocked the Maynaguri-Lataguri road. The Maynaguri-Dhupguri stretch of the Asian Highway was obstructed at Churabhandar by the locals.
The anti-SIR agitation has also spread to neighbouring Cooch Behar district, where residents of Madrasa More in Pachagarh gram panchayat area blocked the Cooch Behar-Mathabhanga state highway for nearly three hours.
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