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The Naxalbari tribal couple that hosted lunch for BJP president Amit Shah last week joined the Trinamool Congress (TMC) on Wednesday, a development the saffron party called "a textbook case of revenge politics".
The BJP alleged the couple was "forced" to join Trinamool Congress, a charge rejected by the duo, Raju Mahali and Geeta Mahali, who had hosted lunch for Amit Shah on 25 April during his visit to the area. The couple joined TMC in the presence of tourism minister Gautam Deb.
In New Delhi, Union Minister Ravi Shankar Prasad said the development indicated that the "success" of Shah's visit had unnerved the TMC.
Prasad alleged the BJP workers and others whom Shah met during his visit to Bhawanipur, Banerjee's assembly constituency, during his three-day West Bengal tour, were also under "pressure".
The BJP was "deeply sad and hurt" over the development, but not in the least concerned, Prasad said, adding it was a "textbook case of revenge politics".
Addressing a press conference at the BJP headquarters, he wondered if the TMC's "desperation" was caused by the CBI's probe into Saradha chit fund case and the Narada bribery sting, allegedly involving several of its leaders, including MPs.
Violence and fear prevailed in the state during the Left rule and it is a tragedy that it remains so under the TMC, he alleged.
Prasad also accused the Mamata Banerjee government of appeasing one section of society, an obvious reference to Muslims, by "misusing" power to stop religious processions during Ram Navami and Hanuman Jayanti.
During his north Bengal trip, Shah had lunch while seated on the floor of Raju Mahali's modest house at Dakkhin Katiajote village in Naxalbari, the place of origin of Left wing extremism in the country.
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