‘Bengalis have seen through BJP’s lies’
The Hindu
Former Silchar MP and All India Mahila Congress president Sushmita Dev is the most visible Congress leader in southern Assam’s Bengali-dominated Barak Valley, comprising 15 Assembly seats. She says th
Former Silchar MP and All India Mahila Congress president Sushmita Dev is the most visible Congress leader in southern Assam’s Bengali-dominated Barak Valley, comprising 15 Assembly seats. She says the disillusionment of the people with the BJP’s “fake love” for Bengali Hindus could help the Congress regain the valley. Excerpts: The Hindu Bengalis took the CAA bait because NRC was a fearful exercise for them as well as for Bengali Muslims. I have been asking people mesmerised by CAA if they really think it will protect them. Why then is the BJP speaking about implementing it in West Bengal and not in Assam where there has been opposition to the law (in Brahmaputra Valley)? Why didn’t (Prime Minister Narendra) Modiji speak about it when he came for a rally in Karimganj? Because they know it is a fake promise and people have understood their fake concern for Bengali Hindus. The BJP is using many tools to say Hindu Bengalis are getting away from the Congress. But our vote share will increase this time. They talk of bringing the people of the two valleys together. But they drove the wedge deeper with CAA besides polarising the voters of Barak Valley on religious lines. If you look at the demography of Cachar (district), you cannot win seats unless you have the votes of every community. We are not a party of one community. Bengalis have seen through the BJP’s lies through steps such as cancellation of holiday on Rabindranath Tagore’s birth anniversary. How can you do that? Is he a Bengali icon or an international icon? And six of the eight BJP legislators are Bengali Hindus from Barak Valley but Chief Minister Sarbananda Sonowal makes them stand in the back. They have done nothing for Hindu Bengalis.![](/newspic/picid-1269750-20250217064624.jpg)
When fed into Latin, pusilla comes out denoting “very small”. The Baillon’s crake can be missed in the field, when it is at a distance, as the magnification of the human eye is woefully short of what it takes to pick up this tiny creature. The other factor is the Baillon’s crake’s predisposition to present less of itself: it moves about furtively and slides into the reeds at the slightest suspicion of being noticed. But if you are keen on observing the Baillon’s crake or the ruddy breasted crake in the field, in Chennai, this would be the best time to put in efforts towards that end. These birds live amidst reeds, the bulrushes, which are likely to lose their density now as they would shrivel and go brown, leaving wide gaps, thereby reducing the cover for these tiddly birds to stay inscrutable.