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The Indian ExpressJune 19, 2026

In West Bengal, justice shouldn’t mean vendetta

In the months since the BJP’s historic victory in West Bengal, an unsettling spectacle has become a recurring feature of public life. Arrested TMC leaders , including local strongmen such as Akash Singh and Jahangir Khan — the latter known for his proximity to senior TMC leader Abhishek Banerjee — have been marched through their former strongholds by police and paramilitary forces in restraints and made to perform public acts of penance. While the Calcutta High Court has expressed concern and sought a report from the government on the short shrift given to due process, investigating agencies have defended them as necessary for the reconstruction of alleged crimes. Chief Minister Suvendu Adhikari has called it a return to the “rule of law”; a BJP MLA has described it as an expression of “true Ram Rajya”. The allegations against Khan and others are serious and deserve rigorous investigation and, where evidence permits, prosecution. But the strength of the rule of law lies not just in holding the guilty to account, but in doing so in a manner that preserves the distinction between justice and retribution.

This is particularly important in Bengal, where political violence has long survived changes of government. But the task of democratic governance is not merely to punish wrongdoing but to elevate public life above this instinct of retribution. There is a categorical difference between accountability delivered through institutions — the police, the courts and independent investigations, following due procedure — and accountability performed on the streets. The latter risks weakening the very legitimacy it claims to uphold, while allowing those accused of serious misconduct to recast themselves as the aggrieved.

The BJP’s mandate in the Assembly elections rested on a promise of change. Its victory reflected growing public fatigue with a political culture in which power too often travelled through muscle, patronage and impunity. But a secure government has no need to turn public humiliation into an instrument of punishment. It has the authority of a constitutional institution to undertake the patient ask of rebuilding trust and confidence in governance. To squander that opportunity would be to dishonour its promise to the people.

Key GK Takeaways for CLAT
  • 1The editorial engages the constitutional guarantee of due process under Article 21, which the Supreme Court in Maneka Gandhi v Union of India (1978) held requires fair, just and reasonable procedure. Parading accused persons for public penance offends the presumption of innocence and the dignity protected by Article 21. The Calcutta High Court's intervention reflects the judiciary's role as a check on executive excess under the constitutional scheme.
  • 2Law and order is a State List subject under the Seventh Schedule, making the State government and its police primarily responsible for the conduct described. The editorial situates the events after a change of government in West Bengal, where political violence has historically survived electoral transitions. This underscores how India's federal structure places the duty of restrained, lawful policing squarely on State authorities.
  • 3Indian law already guards against custodial abuse: in D K Basu v State of West Bengal (1997) the Supreme Court laid down binding arrest guidelines, and Article 22 protects arrested persons' rights. Subjecting detainees to public humiliation can attract liability and judicial censure, and the new Bharatiya Nagarik Suraksha Sanhita, 2023, which replaced the Code of Criminal Procedure, prescribes lawful arrest and investigation procedures. The editorial's call to distinguish justice from retribution echoes these statutory and constitutional safeguards.
  • 4Political violence in West Bengal has deep roots across successive regimes, imposing real social costs on communities and the rule of law. The editorial notes the BJP won on a promise of change and fatigue with muscle, patronage and impunity, raising expectations of cleaner governance. Squandering that mandate through performative humiliation risks eroding public trust that elections are meant to renew.
In West Bengal, justice shouldn’t mean vendetta