'Updating Ration Cards Part of Census': Mamata Assures People NRC Won't be Implemented in Bengal
'Updating Ration Cards Part of Census': Mamata Assures People NRC Won't be Implemented in Bengal
The chief minister is harping on the issue of NRC to counter the BJP which has been saying that NRC would be implemented in the state to get rid of Bangladeshi Muslims who are living in West Bengal illegally.

Kolkata: West Bengal Chief Minister Mamata Banerjee on Tuesday said the National Register of Citizens will not be implemented in the state and assured the people that the current drive to update ration cards is a part of the upcoming Census and has no link with the NRC.

Banerjee, also the Trinamool Congress supremo, claimed that the NRC was actually a ploy to snatch the hard-earned freedom of the countrymen.

The chief minister, who had on Monday accused the BJP of creating panic over NRC and claimed it led to six deaths in the state, tried to dispel the apprehension of the people. A rumour is being spread that this exercise is associated with the NRC, she said without taking the name of the BJP on Tuesday and advised people not to trust those who were spreading such canards.

"There will be no NRC (in West Bengal). Do not worry about it. The current drive of updating ration cards and voters' cards is a routine job for the Cencus," she said.

The chief minister is harping on the issue of NRC to counter the BJP which has been saying that NRC would be implemented in the state to get rid of Bangladeshi Muslims who are living in West Bengal illegally.

Banerjee had raised the issue of NRC in Assam during her recent meeting with BJP president and Union Home Minister Amit Shah in New Delhi.

The final NRC, a list of Assam's residents and published on August 31, excluded the names of over 19 lakh people.

"Those who have been living in West Bengal for long are very much Indian citizens. Nobody will be able to drive anybody out from the state. I assure you that none will suffer in West Bengal because of the NRC," she said. Banerjee was addressing a gathering after launching a

year-long programme to celebrate the 200th birth anniversary of Iswar Chandra Vidyasagar, an icon of the Bengal Renaissance, from his birthplace at Birsingha in Paschim Medinipore district.

Meanwhile, the TMC has asked BJP to clarify the exclusion of a large number of Hindus in the final NRC list in Assam ahead of the saffron party national president Amit Shah's scheduled visit the city to address a seminar on the citizen register and Citizenship (Amendment) Bill. Shah will visit the city on October 1 and inaugurate a community Durga Puja besides addressing the seminar on the two contentious topics.

The chief minister said, "This (NRC) is nothing but a conspiracy to snatch the freedom of the people. This is a lie, a canard. Do not trust them (who are spreading such rumours). I advise you not to trust their words. I will ask you to trust Vidyasagar, Netaji, Vivekananda... Always remember that all are equal in India."

A bust of Vidyasagar was vandalised during a clash between workers of the Trinamool Congress and the BJP when the saffron party president Amit Shah was holding a roadshow in Kolkata before the Lok Sabha elections. The parties accused each other of desecrating the bus.

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