Bengal governor assures action on turban controversy

Tuesday 20th October 2020 16:26 EDT
 
 

KOLKATA: West Bengal Governor Jagdeep Dhankhar said the recent incident involving a Sikh man, whose turban was allegedly pulled by the police, was a matter of "disgrace", and assured members of the community that necessary action would be taken in this regard. Dhankhar, who had been at odds with the Mamata Banerjee-led dispensation since assuming charge in the state, told the delegation he was "deeply hurt" by the episode.

The delegation led by president Delhi Sikh Gurudwara Management Committee Manindar Singh Sirsa submitted a representation regarding the disgraceful act to the governor. The governor also attached a link to a video of the delegation's visit to Raj Bhavan during the day. Sirsa, in his letter to Dhankhar, maintained that "excessive use of force by West Bengal police personnel was against the secular nature of the Constitution". The governor assured strict action against the police official for the outrage.

State education minister and senior TMC leader Partha Chatterjee, however, alleged that Dhankhar was "maligning" the post of governor with his remarks, and shirking responsibilities as the constitutional head of the state. "The governor and the BJP have entered into a conspiracy to defame the state, which has always been known for its communal amity. The Sikh community in the state condemns such conspiracy," he said.

The Delhi Gurudwara committee, in its representation, urged the governor to take note of the incident and initiate steps for "appropriate penal and department action against the police and government employees guilty of committing the excesses and outraging religious sentiments".

Controversy erupted after visuals of the police beating up a Sikh man during BJP's protest went viral on social media, with a section of Netizens claiming that the police had pulled his turban during the scuffle. The saffron brigade claimed the incident has hurt religious sentiments.

The man, identified as 43-year-old Balwinder Singh, is a resident of Bhatinda in Punjab. The BJP said that he was a former soldier of the Indian Army, and currently employed as a private security officer of a party leader. The police, however, argued that the person was carrying a firearm and his headgear "had fallen off automatically in the scuffle".

The state home department, in its tweet, said that the incident was being "twisted out of context by a political party to serve its partisan interest.” Members of the Sikh community took out a protest in the city condemning the incident.

Punjab Chief Minister Amarinder Singh had also expressed shock over the "humiliating treatment" meted out to a Sikh and urged his West Bengal counterpart Mamata Banerjee to take strict action "against the concerned cop for hurting the Sikh religious sentiments".


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