Kolkata: A Hindutva outfit's move to organise 5,000 religious processions on Ram Navami has kept the authorities on tenterhooks in West Bengal as multiple police stations across the state are put on high alert to prevent any potential communal flare-up in anticipation of the Ram Navami celebrations on Wednesday.
West Bengal, a known as the land of festivals with popular saying 'baro mashe, tero porbo', which literally translates to 13 festivals in 12 months, had been in boil over Ram Navami celebrations in the last few years over slugfest between the TMC and BJP over the celebration of Ram Navami in the state.
Interestingly alongside Durga Puja, Kali Puja and Saraswati Puja, which have always been big in Bengal, Ram Navami and Hanuman Jayanti have assumed significance in recent years.
Meanwhile, the Hindu Jagran Manch has asked its cadres to mobilise its men approximately 5,000 religious processions at the ward or panchayat level in all districts of the state. The organisation which subscribes to the same ideology as Rashtriya Swayamsevak Sangh (RSS), has also staged significant processions in Barasat, Siliguri, and Kolkata's Burrabazar.
The district administrations in Hooghly, Howrah, Uttar and Dakshin Dinajpur, Asansol, and Barrackpore, which have previously witnessed communal tensions during Ram Navami celebrations, are asked to be prepared to tackle any law and order crisis.
A police official said processions of the Hindutva outfit will be videographed. Ram Navami celebrations in recent years have transformed into a political battleground, often resulting in rallies escalating into significant political confrontations between the ruling TMC and BJP.
On March 30 last year, clashes broke out in Howrah during Ram Navami celebrations over pelting of stones by elements which allegedly intended to disturb communal harmony in those areas.
The turmoil had spiralled to two other districts, North Dinajpur and Hooghly. The confrontations resulted in injuries to 10 individuals. Earlier this week, the Calcutta high court on Monday granted permission to the Vishwa Hindu Parishad and the Anjani Putra Sena to take out Ram Navami processions in Howrah on April 17 while imposing certain conditions. The state government asked the organisers of the procession to take alternative route.
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