logo
Kol boy 1st Bengali to become 1st citizen of London borough

Kol boy 1st Bengali to become 1st citizen of London borough

Time of India24-05-2025
1
2
Kolkata: The London Borough of Newham on Thursday elected councillor Rohit K Dasgupta as its chair and first citizen, the top civic official representing the council.
Dasgupta, who became the first ever chair of Bengali Indian origin in the borough, will preside over citizenship ceremonies, host dignitaries and chair civic events.
He was first elected to the council as a Labour Party candidate in 2018 and re-elected in May 2022 for the Canning Town South Ward.
An alumnus of St James' School and JU, Dasgupta had moved to London in 2009. Dasgupta told TOI it was "deeply meaningful" for him that someone of Indian Bengali origin, born in Kolkata, was elected to this role. "My vice-chair, councillor Imam Haque, also shares these roots. For the first time, two Bengalis have been elected to the top two civic roles in a UK borough.
We are passionate about our shared heritage. We are working with organisations, such as London Bengal Heritage Foundation, as well as businesses and civic groups for cultural and civic ties between Newham and Kolkata.
"
Newham, Dasgupta said, was home to a vibrant South Asian community, including a significant Bengali population. "Strengthening these connections is both personally meaningful and politically important.
During my acceptance speech, I quoted Tagore to reflect on our shared cultural values and his vision of universalism..." he added.
An associate professor in gender studies at London School of Economics and Political Science, Dasgupta has been a trade unionist, anti-racist campaigner and an LGBTQ+ rights activist. "We are living in a time, when anti-migrant and anti-queer rhetoric is on the rise. Across many societies, trans-people, migrants and other vulnerable groups are being scapegoated and marginalised. As Chair, I will continue to be a proud ally and a voice of solidarity.
I want our communities to know that Newham stands with them," he said.
Get the latest lifestyle updates on Times of India, along with
Brother's Day wishes
,
messages
and quotes !
Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

Rajya Sabha adjourned for day over SIR issue
Rajya Sabha adjourned for day over SIR issue

The Hindu

time23 minutes ago

  • The Hindu

Rajya Sabha adjourned for day over SIR issue

The Rajya Sabha was disrupted once again on Monday (July 28, 2025) as Opposition MPs continued to protest over the issue of the Special Intensive Revision (SIR) exercise in Bihar. The Upper House was adjourned for the day little after 2 p.m. on Monday (July 28, 2025), after being adjourned twice in the pre-lunch sitting. Also Read: Parliament Monsoon session LIVE Day 6 | July 28, 2025 During the Zero Hour, Deputy Chairman Harivansh said he has received 26 notices under Rule 267 demanding discussion on various issues, including SIR and alleged discrimination against Bengali migrant workers in other states. He declined all the adjournment notices and called Sudha Murty (nominated member) to make her Zero Hour mention. However, Opposition members, including those from the TMC and the Congress, were on their feet protesting against the Chair's decision. They were raising slogans like 'Vote Ki Chori Band Karo' (stop vote theft), and the Chair adjourned the proceedings till 12 noon. As soon as the House re-assembled for the Question Hour at 12 noon, various Opposition MPs were on their feet and Sushmita Dev (TMC) trooped into the Well, and sought to raise various issues. As the din continued, the proceedings were adjourned again till 2 p.m. When the Upper House met at 2 p.m., the Chair tried to continue the debate on The Carriage of Goods by Sea Bill 2025. However, Opposition MPs continued to raise slogans demanding a debate on the SIR issue and that the exercise be stopped. Some MPs also trooped into the Well of the House. Amid the din, the Chair adjourned the House for the day. Earlier, as the House met for the day, newly elected Rajya Sabha members I.S. Inbadurai and M. Dhanapal, both AIADMK, were administered oath. The deputy chairman also informed the House that notices must be submitted digitally, noting that some members are still submitting physical notices. He said all notices can be submitted via the Digital Sansad portal.

The 'Real' Bengali: On Migrant Politics In Bengal And Assam
The 'Real' Bengali: On Migrant Politics In Bengal And Assam

NDTV

timean hour ago

  • NDTV

The 'Real' Bengali: On Migrant Politics In Bengal And Assam

A controversy is brewing, which, some political commentators assume, may influence the sundry ' bhadralok ' in the upcoming assembly elections in West Bengal. The state, especially since 1977, has stood out on the country's political map like the tiny Gaulish village imagined by Rene Goscinny in his Asterix series. For most of its political history, West Bengal has been ruled by parties opposed to the Centre. There have been occasions when the conflict has been intense, even hostile. Rarely have those in power in Kolkata considered a Union government "friendly" - rarely, because there have been brief spells of camaraderie. Now, when state assembly elections are expected in March-April 2026, "Bengali pride" seems to be the main ingredient in the political cauldron being stirred by Trinamool Congress (TMC) druids. Chief Minister Mamata Banerjee has exhorted her party members to continue the "movement" against the detention of Bengali-speaking migrant workers in states ruled by the Bharatiya Janata Party (BJP). But will that be enough to fend off the latter's strong nationalist appeal? Mamata's lieutenant-turned-arch-rival and now Leader of Opposition in the state assembly, Suvendu Adhikari, has alleged that these protests are a smokescreen for hiding administrative controversies. He has accused the government of trying to shift focus from corruption, the lack of safety and security of citizens, and other burning issues. Adhikari has also blamed the TMC of harbouring "Bengali-speaking Rohingya" in West Bengal to buttress its vote bank. The Influx From Across Meanwhile, Banerjee has referred to the Assam government's notice to at least two people residing in her state. One of them, a farmer from West Bengal's Cooch Behar district, received a notice late last year from the Assam Foreigners Tribunal. The allegation was followed by a rebuttal from Assam chief minister Himanta Biswa Sarma. He pointed out in a post on X, "...the people of Assam - especially Hindus - are becoming a hopeless minority in our own land. All this has happened over a span of just 60 years." Incidentally, assembly elections are due in Assam at the same time as West Bengal. For long, infiltration has been an issue that has been constantly raised by the two states. Concerns are voiced over Bengali-speaking immigrants squatting on land owned by the state or by its indigenous people. Beginning 1979, Assam witnessed a tumultuous period that saw students and the intelligentsia taking to the streets. It was aimed to address the political, cultural, and economic concerns of Assamese people over large-scale illegal immigration into the state. Six years later, on August 15, 1985, the Assam Accord was signed in New Delhi by the Union and state governments, and the leaders of the movement. Apart from the social, cultural, and political impacts it made, the framework established by the Accord underpins the National Register of Citizens (NRC) exercises. As is now, then, too, the NRC exercise in Assam had drawn flak from the TMC, when in early 2018, its MP, Sougata Ray, alleged that the process was a "conspiracy to drive out Bengali-speaking people from Assam". Interestingly, way back in May 2005, DMK's S. Regupathy, the then Minister of State for Home Affairs in the Manmohan Singh government, had said in the Rajya Sabha: "The Government proposes to prepare a National Register of Indian Citizens and issue Multipurpose National Identity Cards to the citizens of the country". He was answering a question on whether there was a proposal to identify "illegal Bangladeshi migrants on the basis of separate identity cards and a pilot project for such door-to-door verification is already in progress...". Going By Numbers... Based on Census figures of 2001 and 2011, a back-of-the-envelope calculation finds that the Assamese-language population grew by about 16%, yet its share in Assam's total population dipped by 0.42 percentage points in the decade. In contrast, Bengali speakers expanded nearly 23% in absolute terms, lifting their statewide share by 1.37 points between 2001 and 2011. However, it needs mention here that the Census of India, 1911, Volume III, Assam, in para 100 (pages 96-97), stated, "The language of the large foreign population is often returned as Bengali, and most of the aboriginal tribes in the plains are bilingual and are just as likely to return Assamese for their mother tongue as their own language." It also quoted an incident from Lakhimpur, where enumerators "entered the parents as speaking Hindi and their infant born in Lakhimpur as speaking Assamese". They, agreed the document, were just following "a rule of thumb". It is difficult to identify illegal immigrants given the fact that the state was part of the Bengal Presidency under British colonial rule, hosting several Bengali-speaking Hindu and Muslim families. But geographically, due to its location, Assam did witness an influx of refugees during the partition of India (1947) and after the creation of Bangladesh (1971). Even today, undocumented immigrants, with the help of touts, manage to slip through the porous border and even organise documents to prove Indian identity, as many reports claim. The Brahma Committee Report, submitted in January 2018, had also mentioned the risks to the indigenous people of Assam from illegal Bangladeshi immigration into the state. The committee, headed by former Chief Election Commissioner Hari Shankar Brahma, was formed to address the land rights and encroachment faced by the state's indigenous people. The Way We Speak Moving West, the story repeats in West Bengal, where allegations against squatters come from the state's border districts along Bangladesh. The BJP accuses the TMC of appeasing "nearly 40%" of West Bengal's minority population for electoral advantage. According to the Census of 2011, Muslims comprised about 27% of the state's population then. Again, the history and geography of West Bengal is such that identifying Bangladeshi infiltrators poses a challenge. However, despite the similarities, there are differences in the languages spoken in Bangladesh and India. It even differs from region to region within the countries. In his landmark classification, linguist Suniti Kumar Chatterji has identified the broad regional groups, each with its own morphological and phonetic profile. Bengali may be the official language in Bangladesh, but there, it has words drawn from Arabic and Persian. For example, in West Bengal, father is usually ' baba', but in Bangladesh, it is generally ' abbu'; the mother's sister here is addressed as ' maasi', unlike ' khala' on the other side. The pronunciation and diction vary, too. However, much like what's mentioned in the Census 2001 documents on Assam, an offspring of a migrant may speak Bengali as spoken in West Bengal. For a Bengali-speaking Indian, the language may be easy to identify in a first-generation immigrant. For a trained ear, the diction of even a second-generation immigrant may be decipherable. However, electoral and political interests leave little room for such extensive exercises to determine infiltrators. The health of the nation depends on addressing this complex issue without pride, prejudice, or interests in short-term gains.

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into a world of global content with local flavor? Download Daily8 app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store