A senior woman leader of the Bharatiya Janata Party (BJP) in West Bengal, who is also a lawyer by profession, has been accused of acquiring property worth more than Rs 100 cr ($120 million), triggering turmoil within the party’s state unit.
The complaint, unusually, has not come from the opposition but from within the BJP itself. A party worker from Howrah has filed petitions with India’s federal investigative agencies – including the Central Bureau of Investigation (CBI), the Enforcement Directorate (ED), and the Income Tax Department – demanding a probe into the source of the leader’s wealth. Copies of the complaint were also sent to BJP’s national president, J.P. Nadda.
According to the complaint, the BJP leader and a close relative allegedly purchased multiple high-value properties despite declaring significant debt in earlier election affidavits. The documents cited by the complainant claim the leader owed over 7 million rupees in loans during the 2021 elections but has since acquired luxury flats worth several crore rupees. Her relative is accused of buying properties exceeding 10 billion rupees.
The allegations raise suspicions of tax evasion and money laundering, the complainant wrote, urging investigators to determine whether the acquisitions were influenced by the leader’s political position or protected by senior figures within the party.
The controversy quickly spilled into the public domain after Trinamool Congress spokesperson Kunal Ghosh posted on social media that he had received a copy of the complaint. “If true, I hope central agencies will take appropriate action,” he wrote, while stressing that he had not verified the claims.
The BJP has not officially responded, but the accusations have caused unease within its ranks, exposing rifts in a party already struggling to consolidate itself in West Bengal, where Chief Minister Mamata Banerjee’s Trinamool Congress remains dominant.
For the BJP, which has positioned itself as a crusader against corruption, the allegations strike at its credibility, particularly since they involve one of its more visible faces in the state.