Enraged over Ministers' arrest, Mamata Banerjee rushes into CBI office
text_fieldsKolkata: Enraged over the arrest of two of her Cabinet Ministers by the CBI in connection with the Narada bribery case, Chief Minister Mamata Banerjee flashed herself into the CBI office in Kolkata, questioning the Central officers for their failure in abiding by the due procedure.
The CBI on Monday had taken custody of Ministers Firhad Hakim, Subrata Mukherjee and the two others, TMC MLA Madan Mitra and former Trinamool leader Sovan Chatterjee, from their homes.
Chief Minister demanded an explanation from the CBI for not undertaking due procedure before arresting State Cabinet Ministers. She urged them to arrest her too if the CBI was not in line with the system.
The Chief Minister had reportedly gone to Hakim's residence in Chetla before making her way to the CBI office. She also spent 45 minutes at the CBI office as Trinamool leaders protested outside.
The move comes days after Governor Jagdeep Dhankhar gave his consent to the CBI for filing a charge sheet against the accused and sanctioned prosecution against them.
Central forces arrived at the homes of the ministers and two other leaders this morning and took them away in a dramatic escalation of the Bengal-Centre clash brewing since Mamata Banerjee's election victory.
Firhad Hakim, taken away by central security personnel from his home just after 9 am, alleged that he was being arrested without proper sanction. Central forces also went to the homes of Trinamool MLA Madan Mitra and former Trinamool leader Sovan Chatterjee and took them to the CBI office. Sovan Chatterjee, Kolkata's former mayor and senior minister, quit the Trinamool in 2019, joined the BJP but quit that party too this March.
Governor Jagdeep Dhankhar had earlier this month sanctioned CBI investigations against the four.
The Speaker of the state assembly has to sanction the prosecution of MLAs. But in this case, the CBI did not ask the Bengal assembly Speaker for sanction but approached the Governor instead, in January. The Governor said he had the authority to grant sanction not because the four leaders were MLAs but because they were ministers sworn in by him in 2011.
All four were ministers in the previous Mamata Banerjee government when the Narada bribery tapes were shot in 2014. Firhad Hakim and Subrata Mukherjee were sworn in by the Governor as members of the new Mamata Banerjee cabinet after she won a third straight term.
The case involves a sting operation by the Narada news portal, in which Trinamool leaders were on camera accepting bribes.
A journalist from Delhi came to Kolkata, posed as a businessman planning to invest in Bengal, gave wads of cash to seven Trinamool MPs, four ministers, one MLA and a police officer as a bribe and taped the entire operation.
The so-called "Narada tapes" were released just before the 2016 assembly elections in the state.
Mamata Banerjee's party has questioned the timing of the action against Trinamool ministers just days after her landslide victory in polls that turned into a fierce prestige fight between her and the BJP.
Of the 12 Trinamool leaders on the Narada tape, Mukul Roy, who was then a Trinamool Rajya Sabha MP and Suvendu Adhikari, who was a Lok Sabha MP, has since joineMinister'sd the BJP.
The prosecution of Suvendu Adhikari, now a BJP MLA from Nandigram, has not been sanctioned yet by Lok Sabha Speaker Om Birla.
Mukul Roy has just been elected BJP MLA. There has been no action against him either. In the sting tapes, he was not actually seen taking cash but he sent the sting operator to a police officer who was seen taking bribes.
Sultan Ahmed, another MP, has died. The CBI has asked for permission to prosecute Suvendu Adhikari, Sougata Roy, Kakoli Ghosh Dastidar, Prasun Banerjee and Aparupa Poddar. The Lok Sabha Speaker has not granted sanction.