• People's uprising in Sandeshkhali: Villagers free playground seized by Shahjahan
    Telegraph | 23 February 2024
  • Strife-torn Sandeshkhali witnessed a people’s uprising on Thursday with hundreds of villagers reclaiming a century-old playground that Trinamul strongman Sheikh Shahjahan had seized about two years ago, robbing the children of their right to play there.

    As police and local Trinamul MLA Sukumar Mahata looked on, the villagers “freed up” the ground, playing football and planting trees along its boundary wall and sending out a message that Shahjahan’s reign of terror was over.

    “The erstwhile jamidars of Sandeshkhali had donated the plot and later named it Rishi Aurobindo Mission Maidan,” Nitai Mondal, a villager in his early 60s, said.

    “Shahjahan’s men captured the ground in November 2022 on the pretext of holding a football tournament. After that, its main gate was locked and the ground became the property of ‘Sheikh Shahjahan Fan Club’. Our children lost their right to play there.”

    He added: “But today, we have got it back.... This is the beginning of the end for Shahjahan. We have had enough.”

    Trying to control the political damage, the police and Mahata played along by whitewashing over Shahjahan’s name on the boundary wall, distributing footballs among the children, and decorating the main gate with balloons.

    Adults and children had begun gathering outside the ground from 8am, making clear their determination to reclaim the ground in a symbolic declaration of freedom from Shahjahan’s rule. Soon, more people began arriving and the numbers grew to about 150-200.

    As the villagers broke the lock on the main gate and entered the ground, the police and the ruling establishment decided to go along with the public mood.

    Mahata and senior officers including the superintendent of Basirhat police district, Hossain Mehedi Rahman, rushed to the spot carrying footballs, balloons and jerseys for the children. Both Mahata and Rahman were seen playing football with the kids.

    “Why didn’t they come earlier to hand over the ground to us by whitewashing over Shahjahan’s name?” asked Mita Pramanik, a villager whose home is close to the playground.

    “We had been living in fear that Shahjahan (and his aides) Uttam (Sardar) and Shibu (Shib Prasad Hazra) would turn the ground into another bheri,” she added.

    Pramanik said: “The police
    and the MLA knew that our rights over the ground had been taken away. They
    didn’t come to help our children play on the ground. They came today merely to
    take the credit after we had reclaimed the ground.”

    Several
    villagers told this correspondent that they were thankful to the media for
    highlighting how people backed by the ruling party, like Shahjahan and his
    cronies, had grabbed villagers’ land and sexually assaulted women.

    “The
    media glare changed the ground reality, forcing the goons to flee…. We thought
    this was the best opportunity to reclaim the ground and send out the message
    that we are free from Shahjahan’s clutches,” a middle-aged schoolteacher, who
    did not wish to be named, said.

    Sandeshkhali
    has been in the news since an Enforcement Directorate team that arrived to raid
    Shahajahan’s home in connection with the PDS scam was attacked by a mob. While
    Shahjahan has been on the run since then, Hazra and Sardar have been arrested
    on multiple charges, including gang rape.

    While
    there was a palpable sense of relief and liberation in the air after the ground
    was reclaimed, some villagers were circumspect, wondering how long the newfound
    freedom would last.

    “They
    are very powerful. We have seen how Shahjahan wielded complete control over the
    police; he could do anything he wished,” Pramanik said.

    She
    said Shahjahan had turned another old football ground, around 2km away, into a
    bheri.

    An
    elderly villager said the Abhijan Sangha playground — dating back to the 1940s
    — was captured and turned into a bheri three
    years ago with people too afraid to utter a word in protest.

    “I
    used to play there in my younger days. A group of villagers requested them not
    to ruin the beautiful football ground where teams from Calcutta used to come
    and participate in a tournament,” said Shibu Das, a 76-year-old villager who
    showed The Telegraph around the football
    ground-turned-bheri.

    “They
    did not listen to us and pumped saline water into the ground. We dared not
    protest.”

    As
    stories of Shahjahan’s depredations kept tumbling out after the morning
    uprising, Mahata tried to defend the fugitive.

    “No
    one had captured the ground. Shahjahan organised a football tournament, named
    after himself, that is why the outer wall was painted with his name,” the MLA
    said.

    The
    villagers dismissed his version of events.

    A
    villager told this newspaper: “If Shahjahan had not captured the ground, why
    did the police and the MLA take the pains to whitewash the wall and remove his
    name?”

    When
    the same question was posed to Mahata, he said: “Shahjahan’s name should have
    been removed after the tournament. It was giving some politically motivated
    villagers an excuse to accuse him of land-grab, so we took the step.”

    A
    Trinamul leader in Calcutta, however, said that removing Shahjahan’s name from
    the wall was part of a process to erase his memory from the minds of the local
    people and try to regain the ground the party had lost because of people like
    him.

    “The
    party wants to control the damage caused by the accused. Party leaders have
    been asked to meet each of the aggrieved villagers and note down the details of
    their allegations,” the leader said.

    “With
    the BJP looking to capitalise on Sandeshkhali in the run-up to the Lok Sabha
    elections, our top leadership is seeking detailed reports from the area to address
    the grievances.”

    That
    implementing this plan, drawn up by party strategists sitting in Calcutta, will
    be a challenge became apparent on Thursday: Mahata and a group of local
    Trinamul leaders tasted the people’s anger as they began visiting doorsteps.

    “Why
    have you come today? Where were you when our land was grabbed? Why did your
    leaders torture us?” asked a woman, covering her face with a towel.

    Mahata
    and other Trinamul leaders tried to pacify the villagers, requesting them to
    “keep faith” with the party and Mamata Banerjee.

    “We
    want Didi to come and listen to us,” said Kamal Dey Kayal, a woman in her early
    50s.

    A
    Trinamul source said that senior leaders like ministers Partha Bhowmik and
    Sujit Bose would visit Sandeshkhali and meet the villagers at their doorsteps,
    and that the chief minister might pay a visit thereafter.

    “The
    party doesn’t want the BJP to gain politically because of the misdeeds of
    a handful of people. We will try our best to address the popular concerns,” the
    source said.
  • Link to this news (Telegraph)