Politics
Bengal judicial officers’ harassment: NIA to determine if incident was pre-planned or spontaneous
Published On Sat, 04 Apr 2026
Asian Horizan Network
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Kolkata, April 4 (AHN) The National Investigation Agency (NIA), which has begun probing the harassment of judicial adjudication officers at Kaliachak in West Bengal’s Malda district, will focus in its first preliminary report on whether the incident was driven by spontaneous public anger or was a pre-planned attempt to derail the ongoing judicial adjudication process.
The agency's initial findings, to be submitted to the Supreme Court next week, sources say, will focus on whether the incident was a result of the spontaneous public grievance because of the deletion of names of a large percentage of voters referred for judicial adjudication or whether there was any pre-planned method in orchestrating that grievance into the harassment of the judicial officers.
Already, the NIA team had started its investigation into the matter after reaching Kaliachak on Friday afternoon. Although the members of the investigating team have refrained so far from speaking to the media on the progress of the investigation, sources aware of the development say that currently they are collecting background information about the 35 persons accused so far in the matter, specially the mastermind Mofakkarul Islam and Maulana Shahjahan Ali, the All India Secular Front (AISF) candidate from Mothabari assembly constituency in the West Bengal assembly polls scheduled later this month.
The main investigation team comprises 15 officers, led by a Superintendent of Police-rank officer, drawn from NIA units in New Delhi and Mumbai. However, they are assisted by another team of NIA officials posted in Kolkata, familiar with the local language of the region.
A division bench of the Supreme Court, headed by the Chief Justice of India, Surya Kant, earlier this week directed the Election Commission of India (ECI) to hand over the charge of investigation in the matter of harassment of judicial adjudication officers either to the NIA or to the Central Bureau of Investigation (CBI).
Later, ECI opted for NIA for that purpose.
On Wednesday, seven judicial officers, including three women, were held hostage inside a block office at Kaliachak in Malda district by a group of voters whose names had been deleted during the process of judicial adjudication under the “logical discrepancy” category.
At around 1 a.m. on Thursday, a large police contingent led by senior district officials reached the spot, dispersed the protesters, rescued the judicial officers, and escorted them to a safe location. They had been gheraoed for around nine hours.
There were also reports that, even while being shifted to a safe location after their rescue, an attempt was made to attack the convoy.



