New Delhi/Kolkata: West Bengal Chief Minister Mamata Banerjee on Wednesday jumped right into the ongoing political feud between the Railways Ministry and the Maharashtra government as the two bickered over the operations of the Shramik Special trains.
Banerjee sought Prime Minister Narendra Modi's intervention in the alleged "whimsical" functioning of the Railways in sending Shramik Special trains to West Bengal.
She urged the Centre not to pursue politics when the state was battling a dual crisis of COVID-19 pandemic and trail of destruction left behind by Cyclone Amphan.
Shiv Sena leader Anil Parab also hit back at Railways Minister Piyush Goyal, saying he had sent the trains in one go instead of the demand made by the Maharashtra government to operate them in a staggered manner.
The Railways, however, said no trains were being "planned" by the national transporter and it was only operationalising the trains that had been asked for by the states.
"The railways was given a demand with details such as the number of passengers, originating and destination points. All the related coordination is being done by the state governments," it said.
"The railways is a medium providing service by arranging rakes based on the request from these states," it said.
Around 41 trains were to leave for West Bengal on May 26, but only 10 had departed. So far, 35 trains have terminated in Bengal, 22 are in transit and three more are in the pipeline, according to the Railways data.
Earlier, Goyal and Maharashtra Chief Minister Uddhav Thackeray had been involved in a slugfest over these trains.
The Railways said the train schedule was finalised based on the requirement given by the originating State (Maharashtra in this case) and the same is communicated to the destination railway stations.
Officials said while the Railways was ready to run around 100 trains, 26 departed from Mumbai on Wednesday.
As many as 145 trains were scheduled to depart from Maharashtra on May 26, but most could not due to lack of passengers. So far, 677 trains have originated from the state, it said.
Banerjee alleged that the state's infrastructure was "stretched to its limit" after Cyclone Amphan, and it can receive very few trains carrying migrant workers back on a daily basis as of now, she said.