By A Staff Reporter
Alipurduar, West Bengal – Prime Minister Narendra Modi, while addressing a public rally in Alipurduar, launched a strong attack on the Trinamool Congress (TMC) government, listing five major crises he claims are afflicting West Bengal under its rule. His remarks come amid a charged political climate as both the BJP and TMC gear up for the next round of electoral battles in the state.
“Today West Bengal is surrounded by many crises simultaneously,” said the Prime Minister, as he laid out what he called a grim reality under the Mamata Banerjee-led administration. “First is the crisis of violence and anarchy spreading in the society,” he said, alluding to repeated allegations of political violence and lawlessness that have plagued the state.
“The second is the unsafety of our mothers and sisters who are being subjected to heinous crimes,” he added, highlighting concerns over women’s security. The Prime Minister then turned his focus to the youth of the state, saying the “third crisis is of the extreme despair and rampant unemployment spreading among the youth,” a persistent issue that has drawn criticism of the state’s job creation efforts.
The fourth crisis, according to Modi, is a “continuously declining trust in the system,” reflecting a growing public frustration with alleged bureaucratic inefficiencies and institutional breakdowns. The fifth and final crisis, he said, was the “selfish politics of the ruling party that steals the rights of the poor.”