Union Home Minister Amit Shah addresses a gathering during the inauguration of Border Out Posts 'Leti' and 'Indarwa' and e-unveiling and e-foundation laying of various works of the Sashastra Seema Bal (SSB), in Araria, Bihar. Photo | PTI
Nation

BJP will win West Bengal polls, drive out infiltrators: Amit Shah

Calling infiltration a threat to national security, Shah said it also disrupts demographic balance and strains public welfare resources.

TNIE online desk, PTI

Union Home Minister Amit Shah on Thursday expressed confidence that the BJP will win the upcoming West Bengal Assembly elections and vowed to act against infiltration after forming the government.

The BJP leader was speaking at an event in Bihar’s Araria district, part of the Seemanchal region bordering West Bengal, Shah said the party would take firm action on the issue.

“Elections are around the corner in West Bengal. I am confident that the BJP is going to win. Upon formation of the new government, we shall drive out every single infiltrator,” he said.

Shah added that action against infiltration would begin in Bihar, particularly in the Seemanchal region.

“The process of flushing out infiltrators will begin in Bihar, especially in the Seemanchal region. We had won the assembly polls here last year on this very issue.

And, we got the mandate even though opponents were criticising our agenda,” the home minister said.

Calling infiltration a threat to national security, Shah said it also disrupts demographic balance and strains public welfare resources.

“Bihar, Jharkhand, West Bengal and Assam are the most vulnerable to such demographic disturbance. The Narendra Modi government is committed to maintain demographic balance,” Shah said.

(With inputs from PTI)

PM Modi, Trump hold 40-minute phone conversation; discuss trade, West Asia conflict

China flags ‘dangerous’ Hormuz move; Xi proposes plan to restore stability

From Governor’s axe to CM: Samrat Choudhary’s full-circle moment

Noida unrest continues despite wage hike; police deployed, stone-pelting reported

Women's reservation Bill caps LS seat count to 850 seats; final strength via delimitation

SCROLL FOR NEXT