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Anti-CAA protesters torch railway stations in Bengal

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Kolkata, Dec 13

Violence broke out in West Bengal on Friday against the Citizenship Amendment Act as also a possible NRC exercise as protesters vandalised and set fire to railway stations, and squatted on tracks and highways, disrupting train services and vehicular movements.

In Beldanga in Murshidabad district, a mob torched the station master's cabin and ransacked the ticket counter before setting it on fire.

The protesters, carrying posters against the CAA and the proposed National Register of Citizens, vandalised the Beldanga railway station of Eastern Railway, forcing the railway employees to flee to save their lives.

They also blockaded the track, disrupting train movement between Lalgola and Krishnanagar, besides obstructing the National Highway in Beldanga. The protesters also burnt tyres and damaged some vehicles.

In Howrah district, angry protesters barged into the Uluberia station under South Eastern Raiwlay and vandalised its premises and a couple of trains. A driver and a railway official were injured by stones pelted by the protesters.

The mob earlier blockaded the track, adversely hitting train movements on the Howrah-Kharagpur section on both up and down lines.

The Howrah-Coromondol Express and the Howrah-Digha Kandari Express were damaged in the attack.

A number of long-distance trains, including Falaknama Express, East Coast Express, Mumbai Duranta Express, Bhubaneswar Janshatabdi Express and eleven suburban trains, were stranded in and around various stations, even as the protesters moved away from the tracks.

"Some people asked me to alight from the train as the train won't move. Then they dragged me out and ransacked the train," said the guard of the Kandari Express.

"It was a terrifying experience. They broke the window panes. There is no chance of any train movement in the next three to four hours," he said.

Meanwhile, Governor Jagdeep Dhankhar has appealed for peace and asked people to believe in the rule of law and the laws passed by the Parliament.

"We must always believe in peace, we must always believe in the rule of law. We must avoid violence," Dhankhar told the media here.

He described the violence as unfortunate.

"We must believe in the Parliament and the laws passed by it. This violence is unfortunate. But I believe people of Bengal are peace loving and won't indulge in any kind of violence," said Dhankhar.

The BJP blamed Chief Minister Mamata Banerjee, accusing her of spreading lawlessness through her statements opposing the CAA.

BJP National General Secretary in-charge of the state, Kailash Vijayvargiya, alleged that the "shameful incidents" in Bengal were engineered by the infiltrators.

Vijayvargiya wondered whether Banerjee should continue in her post for "even a minute more" after the disturbances "fomented by infiltrators" following her statements.

"Is it proper to lead the state to the brink of lawlessness and disturbances through the infiltrators just for the sake of opposing the law? The BJP condemns this. The people will give you a befitting reply in the coming days," said Vijayvargiya.