Kolkata:The Calcutta High Court on Wednesday asked the Mamata government to file a report in the Birbhum violence case by 2 pm on Thursday when the matter will be taken up for hearing again. The Court directed CFSL Delhi to immediately collect necessary materials for forensic examination at Bogtui village in Bengal's Birbhum district, where at least eight people were charred to death in the suspected fallout of a TMC panchayat official's murder.
A division bench headed by Chief Justice Prakash Shrivastava, taking up a suo motu petition and a set of PILs, ordered that CCTVs be installed at the crime scene in the presence of district judge, Purba Bardhaman, and recordings be done until further orders. The bench, also comprising justice R Bharadwaj, directed a team of Central Forensic Science Laboratory (CFSL) in Delhi to visit the place of incident and collect samples for examination without any delay.
It asked the DGP to ensure the safety of witnesses, including that of a minor boy injured in the arson, in consultation with the district judge, Purba Bardhaman. The court observed that suo motu petition has been registered for fair investigation in the case. The petitioners in the PILs have prayed for a probe by the CBI or by any other agency which is not controlled by the state. Advocate general representing the government opposed the prayer, stating an SIT was probing the matter and that there was no need to transfer the case to any other agency.
West Bengal Chief Minister Mamata Banerjee on Wednesday too vowed that strict action would be taken against the perpetrators regardless of their party colour and announced plans to visit the village of Bogtui, where some ten houses were set ablaze by throwing petrol bombs in the early hours of Tuesday in a suspected revenge attack after the slaying of a local TMC leader.
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The blaze killed eight people including three women and two children. Investigations by the special investigation team set up by the state government are on and some 20 people have been arrested. The village of Bogtui, on the outskirts of Rampurhat town, itself had a deserted look Wednesday as many anxious residents were afraid of the violence which ripped apart their lives on Tuesday night and the fear of arrests by police seeking answers to a series of attacks and counter-attacks fled to other villages. Those that remained had fear writ large on their faces as the smouldering remains of the houses charred by Tuesday's bombings and the blaze it lit remained poignant reminders of the wages of internecine violence that rural Bengal has been witnessing over the last few decades.
Noor Ali, 40, the brother of Bhadu Sheikh, the Trinamool Panchayat deputy chief who was killed Monday around 8.30 pm, said among the suspects picked up by the police were Sheikh's sons. The arrival of delegations led by top politicians from the CPI(M) and BJP including Mohammed Salim, the communist party's new state unit chief and BJP's leader of the opposition Suvendu Adhikari to the village long with large hordes of television crews did not seem to instil much faith among the denizens of the village.
The delegations were however not allowed to enter the houses where the killings occurred as forensic teams were working there to collect evidence. Speaking at a virtual event to inaugurate a gallery dedicated to freedom fighters at the Victoria Memorial here, Prime Minister Modi said the Central Government is willing to help the state in any way required in bringing perpetrators to justice and hoped the state would take steps to bring the culprits to justice quickly.