Dipankar Bhattacharya – Artifex.News https://artifex.news Stay Connected. Stay Informed. Mon, 13 Oct 2025 05:37:00 +0000 en-US hourly 1 https://wordpress.org/?v=6.9.4 https://artifex.news/wp-content/uploads/2026/05/cropped-cropped-app-logo-32x32.png Dipankar Bhattacharya – Artifex.News https://artifex.news 32 32 Bihar Assembly polls: Decks cleared for CPI(ML) Liberation to contest 18 seats, talks on for few more: Dipankar https://artifex.news/article70157408-ecerand29/ Mon, 13 Oct 2025 05:37:00 +0000 https://artifex.news/article70157408-ecerand29/ Read More “Bihar Assembly polls: Decks cleared for CPI(ML) Liberation to contest 18 seats, talks on for few more: Dipankar” »

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CPI(ML) Liberation general secretary Dipankar Bhattacharya on Monday (October 13, 2025) said that decks have been cleared for the party to contest at least 18 seats in the Bihar polls, while negotiations were underway for a few more constituencies.

Mr. Bhattacharya said that the party, which is a constituent of the Opposition Mahagathbandhan, will begin filing nominations from Tuesday (October 14, 2025), even as the Grand Alliance is yet to make a formal announcement about seat sharing.

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He also slammed the voter roll deletions under the Election Commission’s special intensive revision (SIR) as an “electoral purge masquerading as verification”.

The Left outfit, which emerged as a key player in the 2020 polls by winning 12 of the 19 seats it contested, this time had sought around 40 seats.

Mr. Bhattacharya, in an interview with PTI, said that seat-sharing discussions with allies in the Grand Alliance have been finalised for 18 of the 19 constituencies it had fought last time, while talks are underway for a few more.

He said the party’s campaign machinery has already been mobilised across rural Bihar.

The CPI(ML) Liberation is a crucial part of the Grand Alliance, which also includes the RJD, Congress, CPI, CPI(M) and Mukesh Sahni’s Vikassheel Insaan Party (VIP).

Even as the ruling NDA has already sealed its seat sharing formula, the opposition camp remains locked in negotiations. The RJD and Congress are still ironing out their understanding in Delhi, delaying the final announcement of seat distribution.

“The RJD and Congress are finalising their understanding in Delhi. I don’t know the outcome yet,” Bhattacharya said, refraining from commenting on whether the delay would prove disadvantageous.

He had earlier told PTI last month that he hoped the Congress would be more realistic while the RJD more accommodative of its smaller allies during the Bihar seat-sharing talks.

The nomination process for the first phase of polling ends on October 17, and the Left outfit has already set its campaign in motion, focusing on livelihood issues, unemployment, price rise and SIR, which Mr. Bhattacharya termed the “systematic disenfranchisement of the poor.” While finalising seat sharing, the Opposition has also been grappling with the controversy over mass voter deletions in Bihar under SIR, an issue that it has placed at the heart of its campaign.

Rejecting speculations that the Grand Alliance had earlier considered boycotting the polls in protest against alleged large-scale disenfranchisement, Bhattacharya said such an option was “never on the table” as it would “facilitate exclusion instead of fighting it”.

“Boycott was never an option because that would mean walking out of democracy when democracy itself is under attack,” Mr. Bhattacharya said.

“When the entire issue is about exclusion, boycotting the election would only mean voluntarily excluding ourselves. The fight is against exclusion, not to facilitate it,” he said.

His remarks come in the backdrop of RJD leader Tejashwi Yadav’s July statement that the Grand Alliance might “consider boycott” the elections if the deletions were not rectified.

“Some individuals might have made emotional remarks when fears of mass disenfranchisement were at their peak, when nearly two crore voters seemed at risk, but as a party, we never considered boycotting,” he said.

Calling the SIR an “electoral purge masquerading as verification,” Mr. Bhattacharya alleged that the deletion of lakhs of names amounted to a “body blow to democracy and citizens’ right to vote”.

“This is not verification, this is exclusion. It’s a warning sign for the future of India’s democracy. A democracy cannot survive such a massive and opaque cleansing of voters. SIR is an attack on the Constitution itself,” he said.

The EC’s final electoral roll for Bihar, published on September 30, listed 7.42 crore voters, a drop of more than 47 lakh since the SIR began in June. Mr. Bhattacharya accused the EC of “abdicating its constitutional responsibility” and outsourcing the burden of correction to voters and political parties.

“The EC’s job is to ensure a fair and accurate roll. Instead, it has made the process so complicated that ordinary citizens, especially the poor and migrant workers, are unable to navigate it. The burden has been shifted from the institution to the individual,” he said.

The CPI(ML) Liberation leader said the deletions reflected a social pattern of exclusion, disproportionately affecting vulnerable sections.

“Women, the poor, migrant workers, Dalits and possibly Muslims have been most affected,” he said.

“The top three districts with the highest deletions are Gopalganj, Kishanganj and Purnia — two of them Muslim-majority. In Dalit-dominated areas too, large numbers of names have disappeared. These are not random technical errors; these are social patterns of exclusion,” Mr. Bhattacharya added.

He added that reports of around 6,000 voters being deleted on grounds of ‘doubtful citizenship’ raised serious questions about the intent of the exercise.

“If true, this is alarming. Between 2016 and 2019, the law minister told Parliament there were only three such cases across India, none in Bihar. So how did we suddenly jump to 6,000?” he asked.

He said the SIR controversy went beyond Bihar.

“If this SIR model is extended to other States, it will become a national method of disenfranchisement. This is not an administrative update; it’s a political experiment in exclusion,” he warned.

Published – October 13, 2025 11:07 am IST



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AstroSat unravels mysteries surrounding Black Hole X-ray Binary MAXI J1820+070 https://artifex.news/article67867447-ece/ Wed, 21 Feb 2024 01:29:10 +0000 https://artifex.news/article67867447-ece/ Read More “AstroSat unravels mysteries surrounding Black Hole X-ray Binary MAXI J1820+070” »

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The Indian Space Research Organisation’s (ISRO) AstroSat’s full multi-wavelength capabilities have enabled an international team of scientists to unravel the mysteries surrounding the X-ray binary system MAXI J1820+070, hosting a black hole.

AstroSat is India’s first multi-wavelength space observatory which was launched in September 2015 and now a comprehensive study presents unique insights into the behaviour of this transient black hole X-ray binary during its 2018 outburst.

According to ISRO, MAXI J1820+070, positioned around 9800 light-years distant from Earth, is a transient black hole X-ray binary.

It was first detected during its outburst in 2018 using the MAXI instrument aboard the International Space Station (ISS). Because of its proximity to Earth and its remarkable brightness upon discovery, emerging as the second brightest object in the X-ray sky, MAXI J1820+070 garnered significant attention within the astronomy community.

AstroSat, equipped with three X-ray payloads and a UV telescope, captured soft and hard X-ray emissions and far ultraviolet radiation, painting a detailed portrait of the near and distant regions surrounding the black hole in MAXI J1820+070.

Prof. Dipankar Bhattacharya, chairperson of the AstroSat Science Working Group and a co-author of this study, said “This is the first time the full capability of all the co-pointed instruments in AstroSat have been used in unison, supplemented by ground-based observations, and the results are fascinating. I am happy to be a part of this unique investigation of one of the most interesting Black Hole sources discovered in recent times”.

The space agency further said that the significance of this study extends beyond MAXI J1820+070, highlighting the pivotal role of AstroSat in advancing the understanding of transient black hole X-ray binaries.

“With its unique multi-wavelength capabilities, AstroSat opens doors to further exploration of diverse astrophysical phenomena, laying the groundwork for future endeavours in the field,” the space agency said.



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