"In the name of march to Writers, it was an attempt to capture Writers Buildings (state secretariat). Given the situation, the police had to resort to firing," Bhattacharjee told a Judicial Commission inquiring into the police firing which created a huge political controversy.
Bhattacharjee, who was then the Information and Cultural Affairs Minister in the Jyoti Basu Cabinet, said, "At that time, in principle I did not feel the need for judicial inquiry and I still stick to my views."
Mamata Banerjee, who was then Youth Congress president in West Bengal, had called for a march to Writers Buildings demanding voter photo-ID cards to be made mandatory for free and fair polling.
The police had fired on the protestors on Mayo Road and Dorina Crossing at Esplanade, about a kilometre away from Writers Buildings, killing 13 people and injuring several others.
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"The programme was absolutely without any sense of responsibility and to capture Writers Buildings. There was large-scale violence and around 70 policemen were injured," Bhattacharjee claimed.
Seeking to justify the firing, Bhattacharjee said that it depended on the situation and assessment by the law enforcing authorities as to what action was necessary to contain it, adding that "on that day the police had to resort to firing in order to control the situation."
Bhattacharjee, at present a CPI(M) politburo member, also claimed to have learnt inside reports of Congress, which, he said, had felt that the movement was not right.
When the Commission told him that leaders of other Left Front partners had deposed before it that they had wanted a judicial probe into the incident, Bhattacharjee said, "Our partners might have said they preferred a judicial commission, but they stated their views and I have stated mine.