City
Epaper

Constitutional obligations of state don't get vested in Election Commission during polls: Calcutta HC

By ANI | Updated: August 19, 2021 21:10 IST

The Calcutta High Court on Thursday ordered a court-monitored Central Bureau of Investigation (CBI) probe into the incidents of post-poll violence in West Bengal and stated that Constitutional obligations of the state do not get vested in the Election Commission during the process of elections.

Open in App

The Calcutta High Court on Thursday ordered a court-monitored Central Bureau of Investigation (CBI) probe into the incidents of post-poll violence in West Bengal and stated that Constitutional obligations of the state do not get vested in the Election Commission during the process of elections.

"Civil or police administration is under the control of the Election Commission during the process of elections only to ensure free and fair elections. That does not mean that the police stop discharging its normal duties to control law and order," the High court said about the ECI's role.

The High Court observed that arguments run contrary to the stand of the State where it claimed that number of FIRs were registered up to May 03, 2021, for post-poll violence and otherwise also for normal crime in the state the police was duty-bound to maintain law and order and register FIRs and not the Election Commission.

"The State cannot be allowed to blow hot and cold at the same breath. There is nothing placed on record by the state that even normal law and order, and registration of criminal cases comes within the purview of EC," High Court ruled.

On July 15, the National Human Rights Commission (NHRC) team probing the alleged post-poll violence in West Bengal had submitted its final report to Calcutta High Court.

The NHRC in its report on the alleged post-election violence in West Bengal submitted to Calcutta High Court that "Spatio-temporal expanse of violent incidents in the state reflects appalling apathy of the state government towards the plight of victims".

In the report, the committee said, "This was retributive violence by supporters of the ruling party against supporters of the main Opposition party. It resulted in disruption of life and livelihood of thousands of people and their economic strangulation."

Several incidents of violence were reported at various places after the announcement of the Assembly poll results on May 2, after which a four-member team deputed by the Ministry of Home Affairs also visited the post-poll violence-affected areas.

( With inputs from ANI )

Disclaimer: This post has been auto-published from an agency feed without any modifications to the text and has not been reviewed by an editor

Tags: Central Bureau Of InvestigationCalcutta High CourtCentral bureau of investigationsCentral bureau investigationCentral crime bureauSpecial central bureau of investigationCentral investigation bureauJustice of calcutta high courtWest bengal high court
Open in App

Related Stories

MumbaiRs 256 Crore Drug Racket Mastermind Taher Dola Extradited from UAE to Mumbai

NationalSharmistha Panoli Granted Interim Bail by Calcutta High Court

MaharashtraCBI Books Maharashtra IPS Officer Bhagyashree Navtake for Forgery in Rs 1,200 Crore Scam Case

National“CBI Is Biased”: Karnataka Govt Withdraws Consent for Agency To Probe Cases in State

NationalKolkata Doctor Rape Murder Case: Victim's Family Shares Devastating Experience They Went Through

National Realted Stories

NationalPoster war escalates in Bihar as Lalu, Tejashwi targeted over fodder scam

NationalVizag Yoga event sets new Guinness World Record

NationalUttar Pradesh Shocker: Husband, In-Laws Throw Woman Off Roof in Orai; Incident Caught on CCTV

NationalDefence Minister Rajnath Singh leads IDY celebrations at Northern Command HQs in J&K

NationalIDY 2025: Spiritual energy, ancient heritage converge in Ayodhya, Kashi, Prayagraj