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Excerpts of the chief minister Buddhadeb Bhattacharjee’s news conference at the Press Club on Friday.
Q: Clashes have broken out in Nandigram again. Is this as a battle for political space?
A: The present confrontation is not similar to what happened there last November.
Nothing untoward occurred in Nandigram over the past month or so, and peace was gradually returning. Small skirmishes have been reported but there hasn’t been any major clash. Has there been any death?
Rumours are spreading fast and prompting people to flee homes or confront each other.
Q: Do you think the panchayat polls can be held peacefully in Nandigram?
A: There is bitterness (among people) because of the problems Nandigram faced last year, but things have changed radically in the past few months. I assure you peaceful polls.
Q: Is it true that Opposition supporters are being threatened?
A: The state election commission, which has observers all over, never said people could not file nominations because of fear or intimidation. If the Opposition doesn’t have candidates, what can we do? I shouldn’t predict but we hope to win all the zilla parishads.
Q: The Maoist menace is a big worry. Several people, including CPM supporters, are being killed. What action do you plan to take?
A: It would have been good had they joined mainstream politics, but they took to violence, which can’t be tolerated.
Their presence, however, is limited to some 15 villages in Purulia, seven-eight in West Midnapore and about five in Bankura.
Q: You must have seen governor Gopalkrishna Gandhi switching off Raj Bhavan lights.
A: The power situation here is far better than other states. Investors would not stop coming because of stray power cuts resulting from technical failures.
Q: Your ministers have criticised the governor. Don’t you have anything to say?
A: No.
Q: Do you want the governor’s post to be abolished?
A: I won’t discuss this here. There is a panel to look into Centre-state relations. Our party will submit its views once it starts functioning.
Q: The Opposition is still not agreeing to talk to you on industrialisation. Why?
A: If the leader of the principal Opposition party doesn’t want to see my face, it would hardly bother me but it does matter when it affects the state’s interests. How can the state progress without co-operation? I always wanted a consensus on industrialisation but it didn’t happen.
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