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Thursday, October 22, 2009

MAMATA BANERJEE AND HER FILTHY LANGUAGE

It is an open secret that Mamata Banerjee has always been habituated in using offensive and filthy language against Jyoti Basu, Buddhadeb Bhattacharjee and other leaders of the Left Front and the CPI (M). She came to limelight by defacing a police officer in the eighties. Very recently she used objectionable words in respect of the existing Chief Secretary, Government of West Bengal and the Commissioner of Police, Kolkata.

There are Sonia Gandhi, Sushma Swaraj, Jay Lalitha, Mayawati, Deepa Das Munshi, Ambika Soni, Shiela Dikshit and many women leaders in the country. But they never talk in the language, style and body language of Mamata Banerjee. All of them maintain as much soberness, decorum, etiquette and protocol as are possible in public life.

Her disciples and party leaders are also not less than her in any respect. A few glaring examples of the same are enough to substantiate the same.

Just on the eve of Parliamentary Elections, 2009 Shri Kalyan Banerjee, the then TMC Candidate, while addressing an election meeting at Serampore, Hooghly used most abusive and filthy language against Shri Buddhadeb Bhattacharjee, Chief Minister of West Bengal. The Election Commission of India was forced to reprimand him for the same.

Similarly, Tapas Paul, M.P., used dirty language against Congress Party while addressing a rally at Krishnanagar, Nadia. He termed Congress as “a dog licking the feet of CPI (M)”.

At about 1-30 a.m. on 14-10-2009 Soma Das and two other reporters of the Bengali TV News Channel “24 Ghanta” were brutally heckled and manhandled physically by the Central Ministers Mamata Banerjee and Mukul Roy, Purnendu Bose and Dola Sen, the last two being Naxalite leaders in front of the residence of modern Rasputin Subhaprasanna. During this on going, Mukul Roy called Buddhadeb Bhattacharjee by names of his father.

Again, Shri Sisir Adhikari, Minister of State, Government of India, took recourse to abusive and offensive language while addressing mass meeting on 21-10-2009.

There is no denying the fact that this use of language is prevalent in the underworld only. It is certainly not in keeping with the vocabulary and cultural heritage of Bengal.

As a matter of fact, Mamata Banerjee and her colleagues have introduced the language of the underworld in the politics of West Bengal without considering its dire consequences on the society and the future generation.

Their success in the recently held Parliamentary Elections and the support of some politically motivated media has emboldened them further.

It is increasingly being felt that if they are not taught a lesson immediately, the society has to pay high prices for the same in the future.

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