Prime Minister Narendra Modi met with the families of three BJP workers killed during post-election violence in West Bengal [1].
The meeting occurred shortly after the swearing-in ceremony of Chief Minister Suvendu Adhikari at the Brigade Parade Ground [3]. This gesture comes amid heightened political tensions in the state following a period of lethal unrest.
Modi met the families as soon as he stepped off the stage from the oath-taking ceremony [2]. The Prime Minister sought to console and show solidarity with the relatives of those killed in the violence [1].
Among those honored were the families of Debasish Mondal, Anand Paul, and Soumitra Ghoshal [1, 2]. The three individuals were party workers whose deaths became focal points of the political friction following the election cycle [2].
The presence of the Prime Minister at the ceremony and his immediate interaction with the grieving families underscores the BJP's focus on the casualties of the post-election clashes. The state of West Bengal has seen a surge in political volatility, with party workers frequently targeted in clashes between opposing political factions [1].
By prioritizing these meetings immediately after a major administrative transition, the Prime Minister linked the new government's beginning with the losses suffered by his party's grassroots workers [2].
“PM Modi met the families of three BJP workers killed in post-election violence.”
This interaction signals that the BJP intends to keep the issue of political violence in West Bengal at the forefront of its regional agenda. By meeting the families immediately after the swearing-in of Suvendu Adhikari, the Prime Minister is framing the new administration's start within the context of party martyrdom and the need for security for its workers.




