At a time when India is stepping up its crackdown on illegal Rohingya infiltration, the Trinamool Congress (TMC) once again seems to be standing with the infiltrators rather than national security. West Bengal Chief Minister Mamata Banerjee took to the streets in Kolkata, not to support the victims of terrorism or the families of murdered BJP workers, but to defend Bengali-speaking individuals suspected of being illegal migrants. This protest comes even as intelligence inputs reveal an alarming rise in Rohingya presence across Indian cities. Banerjee’s attempt to shield those facing scrutiny raises questions: Is the TMC leveraging illegal votes ahead of the assembly polls?
Mamata’s Street Drama: Shielding Infiltrators in the Name of ‘Bengalis’
On Wednesday, Mamata Banerjee led a protest march through the heart of Kolkata, alleging that Bengali-speaking workers were being harassed in BJP-ruled states. Accompanied by TMC National General Secretary Abhishek Banerjee and other leaders, she claimed the detainees were Indian citizens being falsely branded as “Rohingyas.”
“I challenge you to prove that Bengali-speaking people are Rohingyas,” thundered the CM, without acknowledging the national security risk posed by unchecked infiltration. The protest disrupted traffic for hours across College Street and Dorina Crossing. Over 1,500 police personnel were deployed, not to safeguard citizens from terror threats, but to protect a politically motivated march.
The protest appeared conveniently timed—just a day before Prime Minister Narendra Modi’s scheduled visit to Bengal—suggesting that the TMC is now using street agitation as a tool to divert attention from its growing political irrelevance and administrative failures.
Nationwide Rohingya Crackdown: BJP’s Tough Stand on Infiltration
While Mamata Banerjee plays vote-bank politics in Bengal, the BJP-led central government and state authorities across India have intensified action against illegal Rohingyas, many of whom are suspected of links with extremist groups.
In Maharashtra, several Bengali-speaking individuals without proper documents have been detained and deported. Similar drives have been reported from Delhi, Telangana, and Karnataka. In Odisha’s capital Bhubaneswar, an illegal Rohingya settlement was razed in an eviction drive backed by court orders.
The Ministry of Home Affairs has also flagged the Rohingya presence in Jammu, Hyderabad, and Delhi as a security concern, with Union Home Minister Amit Shah stating in Parliament that “every illegal migrant will be identified and removed.” BJP-ruled states are now ensuring that illegal settlers do not get access to ration cards, Aadhaar, and voter IDs—resources that have often been misused in the past with political blessings.
TMC’s History of Defending Infiltrators and Undermining National Security
Mamata Banerjee’s latest protest isn’t a one-off incident. The TMC has consistently opposed the National Register of Citizens (NRC) and the Citizenship Amendment Act (CAA), both critical tools to weed out infiltrators and protect persecuted minorities from neighbouring countries.
In 2012, Banerjee infamously referred to illegal Bangladeshi immigrants as “guests” and questioned the existence of the infiltration problem altogether. Her government has blocked every attempt by central agencies to investigate Rohingya networks operating in West Bengal, especially along the Indo-Bangladesh border in districts like Malda, Murshidabad, and North 24 Parganas.
Security agencies have repeatedly warned that Rohingya settlements are growing in Bengal under political protection. Several operatives with links to Pakistan-based terror modules have reportedly used these routes to enter India, taking shelter in TMC-dominated areas. Instead of cooperating, the state government continues to create a smokescreen of “human rights” and “Bengali identity.”
Election Commission Steps In: Crackdown on Bogus Voters Begins
The Election Commission of India (ECI) has now stepped in to revise the electoral rolls in Bengal, Bihar, and Delhi after alarming reports of illegal voters, many allegedly from Rohingya settlements and infiltrator clusters. BJP Leader of Opposition Suvendu Adhikari, joined by 50 MLAs, met ECI officials in Kolkata demanding urgent deletion of Rohingya names from Bengal’s voter list.
Adhikari claimed, “The TMC is trying to pad up its vote bank using illegal infiltrators and fake documents. We will not allow this attack on India’s democracy to succeed.”
Sources within the ECI confirm that special teams have been dispatched to border districts to verify voter records. The Commission is also coordinating with intelligence agencies to ensure that no illegal migrant votes in the upcoming 2026 Bengal assembly elections.
Meanwhile, in Cooch Behar, a farmer received a Foreigners Tribunal notice—one of several recent cases indicating deeper scrutiny. Mamata Banerjee has, as expected, termed these actions “harassment,” but the truth is clear: the days of appeasement politics at the cost of national interest may soon be over.
Time for Bengal to Choose National Security Over Vote-Bank Politics
The TMC’s protest march and Mamata Banerjee’s fiery rhetoric may make headlines, but they fail the test of responsible governance. At a time when the country is united in its mission to eliminate illegal infiltration, any attempt to shield questionable elements under the guise of language or identity is nothing short of betrayal. The Election Commission’s timely intervention and BJP’s consistent stand show that the country is finally waking up to the internal threats created by appeasement politics.
With elections approaching, Bengal faces a stark choice: continue down the dangerous path of TMC’s vote-bank politics or choose a governance model that prioritizes national security, law, and order. As the rest of India moves to secure its borders and voter rolls, Bengal too must follow suit—for the nation, and for its own survival.




























