Four killed in post-election violence in India’s West Bengal
Four people died in post-election violence in West Bengal following the BJP’s landslide victory in the 2026 Assembly elections, which ousted the TMC government. Clashes erupted between BJP and TMC supporters starting Monday evening after results were announced, involving attacks on party offices, arson, and street confrontations.
Incident Details
Violence spanned Kolkata and districts like Birbhum, North 24 Parganas, South 24 Parganas, and Howrah, with reports of four deaths: two BJP workers and two TMC grassroots activists. Specific cases include TMC worker Abir Sheikh hacked in Nanoor, Birbhum; a BJP activist lynched in Udaynarayanpur; and deaths in Kolkata’s New Town and Beliaghata areas from clashes and beatings. TMC offices in areas like Tollygunge, Kasba, Siliguri, and Baruipur were vandalized or set ablaze.
Political Reactions
BJP and TMC traded blame, with BJP claiming internal TMC factionalism and TMC alleging BJP “goons” targeted their workers. BJP spokesperson Debjit Sarkar confirmed two party worker deaths, while TMC’s Narendran Chakraborty reported brutal murders and office attacks.
Response Measures
Police deployed central forces amid tensions, with one officer shot in the leg; the Election Commission ordered “zero-tolerance” action. Authorities warned against social media misinformation as security tightened across the state.
