Bengal headmaster ends life amid electoral roll revision pressure

A booth-level officer in West Bengal's Bankura district died by suicide due to pressure from the Special Intensive Revision of electoral rolls. Haradhan Mandal, a 53-year-old headmaster at Rajakata Majherpara Primary School, left a note citing overwhelming stress. The Trinamool Congress and BJP have blamed the Election Commission and state government respectively for the incident.

On Sunday, Haradhan Mandal, a 53-year-old booth-level officer and headmaster at Rajakata Majherpara Primary School in West Bengal's Bankura district, died by suicide in a classroom. He was handling BLO duties for booth number 206 in the Ranibandh block alongside his teaching responsibilities during the Special Intensive Revision of electoral rolls. Police recovered a suicide note beside his body, in which he wrote, “I can no longer handle the pressure. Bidding farewell. I alone am responsible for this. No one else is. The mistake is mine.” He also noted that he did not trust others and handled all tasks himself.

Mandal left home around 10 am, telling family he was collecting voter documents, but they found his hanging body later at the school. The SIR process is in its second phase, involving hearings for voters with mismatched information. His family said Mandal suffered from physical ailments and depression due to the workload, often working until 3 or 4 am.

Son Soham Mandal stated, “My father was suffering from various physical ailments. Despite that, he used to work on the SIR until 3 or 4 am. On top of that, there were various other forms causing mental pressure. He could no longer bear this mental strain and committed suicide.” Wife Mala Mandal added, “Due to his illness, my husband used to finish his dinner and go to bed by 9 pm. But because of the SIR work, he had to stay awake throughout the night. He tried his best to ensure there were no errors in his work. But he received no help from anyone. He was forced to take this step.”

Trinamool Congress leader Abhishek Banerjee posted on X, “The death toll keeps mounting. Another BLO... has taken his own life under the inhuman pressure of a HURRIED, CHAOTIC and POLITICALLY-MOTIVATED SIR process... Over 50 lives have already been lost... What should have been a methodical process has instead been bulldozed through by a pliant, complicit Election Commission.” BJP's Mangal Pandey countered, “The SIR work has been conducted in Bihar as well... But here, the Chief Minister has been opposing the SIR from the very beginning. Consequently, the local administration and the TMC leadership are constantly pressuring the BLOs... The state government and the Trinamool party must take full responsibility.”

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Realistic illustration showing the exterior of St Columba's School in Delhi with grieving father, suspended staff, and media amid investigation into student's suicide.
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Delhi school suspends four staff after class 10 student's suicide

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A class 10 student at Delhi's St Columba's School died by suicide on November 18 by jumping from Rajendra Place Metro station, alleging mental harassment by teachers. The school has temporarily suspended the headmistress and three other staff members, while the Delhi Education Department has formed a probe committee. The boy's father called the suspension insufficient and demanded arrests.

West Bengal Chief Minister Mamata Banerjee has written to the Chief Election Commissioner criticizing the Special Intensive Revision (SIR) of electoral rolls, alleging it has led to 77 deaths and aims to exclude voters. She highlighted the lack of sensitivity in the hearing process and urged corrective actions.

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The Supreme Court on March 10, 2026, heard a plea challenging voter deletions during West Bengal's Special Intensive Revision (SIR) of electoral rolls and directed the Election Commission to enhance logistical support for claims and objections. This follows TMC MPs' recent push for a parliamentary debate on the issue and ongoing protests led by Chief Minister Mamata Banerjee over the process, which has deleted millions of names.

A senior official in West Bengal's Chief Electoral Officer's office stated that the second supplementary voter list under the SIR process is likely to be published by March 27 or 28. Around 36 lakh voter entries from the pending list have been disposed of so far.

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The Election Commission has published the second supplementary voters' list for West Bengal under the Special Intensive Revision (SIR) process, with over 37 lakh adjudication cases disposed of. This follows the first list released on March 23, covering about 29 lakh cases.

A special investigation team has questioned income tax officials in the suicide case of Confident Group founder CJ Roy. The incident occurred during a tax search in Bengaluru, amid claims of pressure. The company's managing director described the inspection as routine.

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West Bengal Chief Minister Mamata Banerjee called for protests on International Women’s Day against recent LPG price hikes and deletions from electoral rolls during her ongoing sit-in in Kolkata. She accused the BJP and Election Commission of targeting Bengali-speaking voters ahead of assembly elections. Banerjee also announced early crediting of funds under a youth employment scheme.

 

 

 

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