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Mamata bans English dailies from WB libraries

March 28, 2012 17:08 IST

Stoking a controversy, the West Bengal government has banned English and mass-circulation Bengali dailies at state-sponsored and aided libraries in the state which will make available only eight selected newspapers.

The order by the Mamata Banerjee government in an official circular evoked criticism on Wednesday from Trinamool ally Congress, Left parties and also the intelligentsia which said the decision was "undemocratic, undesirable and worse than censorship." A demand was also made to withdraw the circular.

The state government however defended the decision and ruled out withdrawing the circular specifying purchase of the eight dailies for the libraries. The government also said the order had been issued in accordance with its policy.

"The circular is okay.. The circular has been issued in accordance with government policy," said state's Libraries Affairs minister Abdul Karim Chowdhury after a 45-minute meeting with Chief Minister Mamata Banerjee.

Under the order issued by the Department of mass education extension and library services, purchase of newspapers/dailies by the public libraries shall be restricted

to Sangbad Pratidin, Sakalbela, Khabar 365 din, Ekdin, Dainik Statesman (all Bengali), Sanmarg (Hindi) and Akhbar-E-Mashriq and Azad Hind (both Urdu dailies).

English dailies or large circulation Bengali ones will no longer be available in state-sponsored and aided libraries in West Bengal as per the order which was issued in "public interest".

The circular also said no government fund will be spent for purchase of any newspaper or daily published or purported to be published by any political party in any public library in the state.

"It is felt that the eight newspapers/dailes will, besides promoting language, particularly among the rural masses, significantly contribute to the development and spread of free thinking among the members," it said.

The only banned newspaper that is published by a political party is Ganashakti, which is a Communist Party of India mouthpiece.

Communist Party of India-Marxist leader Sitaram Yechury said the order is "worse than censorship" and has shades of "fascism".
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