New Delhi: Union Home Secretary Ajay Kumar Bhalla discussed the law-and-order situation in West Bengal with two top civil and police officers of the state through a video-conference on Friday, after their refusal to come to New Delhi despite two repeated summonses, officials said.
The meeting was first scheduled for December 14, days after an attack on BJP president J P Nadda's convoy in West Bengal, but had to be cancelled after state Chief Secretary Alapan Bandyopadhyay and Director General of Police (DGP) Virendra refused to travel to the national capital.
The two officers were again called on Thursday for a meeting on Friday. They again refused to come but offered to attend the meeting through a video-conference.
They were asked by the Union home secretary to explain the law-and-order situation in West Bengal which they did, a home ministry official said.
The home secretary is also believed to have asked the two officers about the political violence in the state and the steps taken to check it.
The attack on Nadda's convoy and the state government's refusal to relieve three IPS officers summoned for central deputation were also understood to have figured in the meeting, another official said.
The chief secretary and the DGP were called by the home ministry on December 14 after receiving a report on December 11 from West Bengal Governor Jagdeep Dhankhar on the law-and-order situation in the state.
Dhankhar was asked to submit a report after Nadda's convoy was attacked with stones and bricks in West Bengal's Diamond Harbour on December 10 during his two-day visit to the state.
The Centre and the West Bengal government have been at loggerheads since the attack that took place in the Lok Sabha constituency of Chief Minister Mamata Banerjee's nephew Abhishek Banerjee.
After the attack, the home ministry summoned three IPS officers -- Bholanath Pandey (SP, Diamond Harbour), Praveen Tripathi (DIG, Presidency Range) and Rajeev Mishra (ADG, South Bengal) -- for deputations at the Centre. The three were responsible for Nadda's security during his visit to the state.