Villagers in Shyampur, West Bengal, shaved the head of Trinamool Congress leader Sannyasi Manna and paraded him with a garland of shoes.
The incident highlights growing local frustration over the alleged misappropriation of rural employment funds and the use of vigilante justice to punish political figures.
According to reports, the crowd tied a rope around Manna's waist before handing him over to police. The villagers said the leader embezzled funds from the MGNREGA 100-day scheme [1].
Local residents said Manna extorted beneficiaries by using their job cards and Aadhaar details to siphon money from the program. The MGNREGA program is designed to provide guaranteed wage employment in rural areas [1].
The confrontation took place in the Howrah district of West Bengal. The public humiliation served as a protest against the perceived corruption within the local administration, a tension that has surfaced in various rural pockets of the state.
Police took custody of Manna following the event. Authorities have not yet announced formal charges, though the accusations center on the theft of government resources intended for the poor [1].
“Villagers in Shyampur, West Bengal, shaved the head of Trinamool Congress leader Sannyasi Manna.”
This event reflects a volatile intersection of political corruption and grassroots anger in rural India. By targeting a leader of the ruling Trinamool Congress party, the villagers demonstrated a breakdown in trust toward formal legal channels for reporting fraud in the MGNREGA scheme. The use of public shaming and physical humiliation suggests that local populations may resort to extrajudicial measures when they believe government officials are exploiting the very social safety nets designed to protect them.




