Mamata’s Misplaced Outrage: Bengal Burns While She Cries for Delhi

While West Bengal reels under violence, rape cases, and public unrest, Mamata Banerjee has turned her attention to Delhi, ignoring the cries of her own people

Mamata's Misplaced Outrage: Bengal Burns While She Cries for Delhi

West Bengal CM Mamata Banerjee

While West Bengal reels under violence, rape cases, and public unrest, Mamata Banerjee has turned her attention to Delhi, ignoring the cries of her own people. Is this genuine concern or political deflection? Mamata Banerjee, the Chief Minister of West Bengal, has once again jumped into the spotlight, expressing outrage over alleged harassment of Bengali-speaking residents in Delhi’s Jai Hind Colony. However, her vocal concern for Delhi rings hollow when her own state is in turmoil. From the brutal RG Kar hospital rape case to the recent tragedy involving the rape of a law college student in the Mango Mishra case, Bengal’s streets are not safe. Women, students, and vulnerable sections live under a looming shadow of fear. Despite these alarming events, the Chief Minister has remained conspicuously silent, offering no concrete action or justice.

Teachers, Doctors, and the Unheard Voices

Protests by Bengal’s teachers over unpaid dues, lack of appointments, and political discrimination have been going on for years. Qualified candidates with top rankings have had to sit on dharnas while TMC-backed candidates were reportedly favoured. Similarly, Bengal’s doctors have hit the streets demanding better working conditions, security, and pay. Rather than addressing these core issues, Mamata has dismissed these agitations as conspiracies, branding genuine protesters as “agents of BJP.” Is the CM truly listening to her people?

Infiltration and Lawlessness on the Rise

Instead of securing her borders, Mamata Banerjee’s government is accused of enabling large-scale illegal infiltration. Numerous reports suggest unchecked Bangladeshi and Rohingya infiltration into Bengal, which has led to a demographic imbalance and rising crime rates. In several parts of Bengal, incidents have been reported of Hindu citizens being assaulted by extremist elements. But Mamata’s administration seems more interested in appeasement politics than ensuring law and order. Her selective silence over communal violence betrays a political motive.

Bengal’s Judiciary Undermined, Democracy Eroded

Even the judiciary in West Bengal hasn’t been spared. Court rulings and investigative efforts have often been dismissed or resisted by the state machinery. When the Calcutta High Court ordered investigations into recruitment scams, the state tried every trick in the book to stall accountability. From the SSC scam to the School Jobs scam, TMC ministers and leaders were arrested, and yet Mamata called it a political witch-hunt. Is this the democratic governance she claims to uphold?

Mamata’s Delhi Diversion: Political Gimmick or National Interference?

While Delhi authorities reportedly acted against illegal encroachments in Jai Hind Colony — a matter sub-judice — Mamata Banerjee chose to interfere from Kolkata, issuing statements that paint the Centre and Delhi government as anti-Bengali. But what about the people of Bengal who’ve faced forced evictions in Kolkata slums for beautification drives? Were they not Bengali enough to merit her attention? Her loud criticism of BJP-governed states appears less about justice and more about political mileage.

Time to Fix Bengal First Heading: Bengal Needs a Leader, Not a Spokesperson for Delhi

West Bengal deserves better. The people want safety, justice, and economic development — not hollow rhetoric aimed at national headlines. Mamata Banerjee’s constant attempts to portray herself as the saviour of Bengalis outside her state, while ignoring the mess within, reveal a troubling trend: distraction over responsibility. From infiltration, violence, rape, corruption to protests across every professional sector — Bengal is crying for governance. Before lecturing Delhi or the BJP, Mamata must look inward. Her silence on Bengal’s real problems is deafening.

 

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