Battle for Malda: One family\, three candidates and a wall that separates them

Battle for Malda: One family, three candidates and a wall that separates them

Press Trust of India  |  Kotwali (Malda) 

It was a "difficult decision" to join TMC, said Noor, sitting behind her desk in her ancestral home, a legacy of Khan Choudhary, her uncle and veteran from Malda, who represented it eight-times in Parliament.

Noor's uncle and Isha Khan's father, Abu Hashem Choudhary, is a three-time from Malda-South and contesting from there again.

The father-son duo is trying to appropriate the legacy of Khan, who has considerable influence on the psyche of voters in the area even a decade after his death.

After Noor decided to fight against her cousin, a wall has been erected at the ancestral home, sending a clear message to visitors to weigh their options before entering the compound.

A series of chairs are lined up near the wall and large photos of and his sister Ruby Noor, Noor's mother, hang over them.

Visitors are forewarned against sitting on one of the chairs, a "used to sit there," a family loyalist said.

It is this loyalty, hopes, would win it the two seats in to the father-son duo. Noor had won Malda-North constituency in 2014 on a Congress ticket. She joined the in January this year.

Malda, about 350 km from West Kolkata, has been a Congress bastion for decades. After Noor joined TMC, the wall was built, dividing the compound where used to meet his supporters and assured them his support.

Family feuds are not new in politics. But this wall may mark the end of an era for Congress, which has not shied from seeking votes in Ghani Khan's name in the two constituencies (North, South) for four decades.

Congress workers fear Noor may divide Muslim voters, who have traditionally stood behind the family and have been a deciding factor in previous elections.

"It was a difficult choice. A difficult decision," Noor told "I made this decision after consulting my supporters, and even my family. It was a situation when I thought the only way to confront BJP was to form an alliance of the opposition. But that did not happen.

"The only next option available was joining TMC as only didi (Mamata Banerjee) is able to stop the religious polarisation happening here, she said, explaining why she does not "regret" her decision.

What about the family? Did not her decision divide the family of Ghani Khan? Noor maintains her decision to join TMC has not harmed her personal relations with her cousin or her uncle.

She may be right. Isha Khan's wife was looking after Noor's children as they rode bikes inside the campus when reporters visited the ancestral home. But voters do not seem convinced, they see her decision to quit Congress as selfish.

"This wall upsets me," said Jamarul, who came to meet "For years, this building stood for something security, safety and continuity. That is lost now. How could she do this? It could split Muslim votes benefiting the BJP," he said, appearing disappointed with the split in the family.

Despite the political divide, supporters said, the family members have managed to live in the same compound. They also share their kitchen. "There is one kitchen, is served from there. However, during elections, Noor and her children's is being cooked separately," said Renu Roy, who has worked for the family for 40 years.

Noor's decision is "just politics", she added. refused to speak on Noor's defection to TMC, saying only that it will not "affect us".

"TMC has tried to campaign that Noor's desertion will harm us. However, her decision will harm her own reputation and not of our family," said, confident that Congress will retain both the seats.

While Noor is a candidate from Malda-North, her vote is in Malda-South, where her uncle is pitted against TMC's Md Moazzem Hossain.

Will she vote for her uncle on April 23, when the constituencies go to polling? That's not clear yet. Also, it is difficult to objectively analyse the consequence of Noor's decision to join TMC until its outcomes are clearly visible. That will take a month when the results are declared on May 23.

(This story has not been edited by Business Standard staff and is auto-generated from a syndicated feed.)

First Published: Sun, April 21 2019. 14:20 IST