Kolkata: Intermittent rain in the run-up to Kali Puja and Diwali coupled with the ban on sound-emitting firecrackers by the authorities caused a steep decline in the footfall and sale at the 'Bazi Bazar' (fireworks market) here.
The 'Bazi Bazar' is a cluster of outlets set up in the central part of the city, organised by a fireworks dealers' body and supervised by the state government. It is held for around a week in the run-up to Kali Puja and Diwali each year.
A large section of the customers are not interested in buying light-emitting fireworks such as 'phuljhuri' and 'chorki', said Umar Bhai, one of the stall owners at Bazi Bazar.
"I am not hopeful of the overall sales figure crossing Rs 5 lakh mark this time. If there is no let-up in rain by tomorrow, there will only one day be left - Kali Puja and Diwali. Things are turning more dismal with every passing year," he told PTI at the Bazi Bazar on Friday.
Umar Bhai said he had hoped of better sales this year as the Bazi Bazar returned to central Kolkata from the city's southern part where it had been organised last year.
"Our hopes are dashed. Sales have not been more than 10 per cent of last year's figure of around Rs 5 lakh in my stall. Things are turning more dismal with every passing year," he said.
The number of stalls has come down from 52 in 2018 to 39 this year, said Santanu Dutta, Joint Secretary of the Burrabazar Fireworks Dealers Association that organises the Bazi Bazar.
Showing this PTI correspondent the complex with rows of stalls but only a handful of customers, Dutta said from lakhs of visitors in the last couple of years, the footfall could be barely around thousands, since the Bazar has opened on October 23.
Dutta alleged that the law enforcing authorities have failed to stop the manufacture and sale of banned fireworks from illegal units in the fringe areas like Nungi, Champahati, Nilganj, and Titagarh.