Bengali Migrant Worker Dies in Goa Custody: Abhishek Banerjee Raises Massive Questions About “What’s Their Crime.? They’re From Bengal”
- Diptota Dey
- 04 Jan, 2026
§ Goa Bengali Worker Death Case
§ Abhishek Banerjee’s Hard-Hitting Questions About Migrant Harassment
24 South Pargana’s, Diptota Dey: A 34-year-old migrant worker from West Bengal, Debanand Sana has died under controversial circumstances in Goa police custody, sparking fresh outcry over the treatment of Bengali-speaking workers in BJP-ruled states. The incident in early January 2026 has reignited a simmering political battle between Trinamool Congress leader Abhishek Banerjee and the BJP with the TMC national general secretary demanding answers to a piercing question: “What’s their fault.? They’re from West Bengal.”
Sana, a mason from Taki municipality in Basirhat, North 24 Parganas was detained on December 25, 2025 by Vasco da Gama Police in Goa on suspicion of burglary after locals mistook him for a thief. Five days later on December 30, he was dead. His family claims he was beaten to death for speaking Bengali. Authorities have launched an investigation into the “unnatural death” but questions mount about what actually happened inside the police station and hospital walls.
The timing couldn’t be more sensitive. Banerjee has now weaponized this case, alleging that his party has received 1,200 to 1,400 incidents of harassment against Bengali migrants in just eight months—a damning figure that suggests a coordinated pattern of violence and discrimination across multiple states.
Detailed Context & THE INCIDENT
What Happened to Debanand Sana.?
On December 25, 2025, residents of Bhutebhat in Vasco da Gama, Goa, stopped Sana, believing he was part of a burglary gang. Instead of releasing him after realizing their mistake, locals handed him to police. Sana was taken into custody by Vasco da Gama Police.
The official police narrative: Sana became ill while in custody and was admitted to the Institute of Psychiatry and Human Behaviour (IPHB) at Bambolim on December 26. He was later transferred to Goa Medical College (GMC), where he succumbed to injuries on December 30, 2025.
The family narrative: Sana’s sister, Ruma Mondal, said she spoke to her brother the morning he was arrested. “There are bruises and injury marks on the soles of his feet. This clearly shows he was beaten. The police killed him,” she told media outlets. His mother, Kamala Sana, repeatedly broke down, asking: “Why did the Goa police arrest him.? How did he die in custody.?”
The autopsy report mentioned “high-energy blunt trauma” as a contributing factor—a technical term that could refer to beating—though full medical findings remain contested.
═════════════════════════════════════════════════════════════════════
Career Opportunity: Career Opportunity: Hiring Marketing Manager | High-Commission Field Sales | Web & App Development
═════════════════════════════════════════════════════════════════════
ABHISHEK BANERJEE’S EXPLOSIVE ALLEGATIONS
Banerjee didn’t hold back. In a statement that’s gone viral across social media platforms, he highlighted what he calls a systematic pattern of persecution,
“From migrant workers to elderly people, everyone is being harassed. In the last eight months, we have received 1,200 to 1,400 incidents of harassment against Bengali speakers in BJP-ruled states. Some incidents occurred in Medinipur, some in Cooch Behar, some in Jalpaiguri, some in Dinajpur, some in Malda, some in Murshidabad. What is their fault.? That they are from West Bengal.”
The TMC leader went further, connecting this case to a broader narrative of what he calls “ethnic persecution”
“Right-wing forces are using fear, lynching and threats to attack minorities, Dalits and marginalized communities. India’s climate is being deliberately poisoned. This is not governance—it is moral collapse. These attacks tear apart the very foundation of India: our unity in diversity.”
The statement resonated across platforms like X (formerly Twitter), Instagram and Facebook with thousands of shares and expressions of solidarity from migrant worker rights advocates.
THE NUMBERS DON’T LIE: 1,143 COMPLAINTS IN 10 MONTHS
What makes Banerjee’s allegations more than political rhetoric is data backing them up. Samirul Islam, chairman of the West Bengal Migrants Welfare Board (and a Rajya Sabha MP from TMC), confirmed receiving 1,143 official complaints of harassment in the past ten months—primarily from BJP-ruled states.
The breakdown is alarming,
· 95 people detained for speaking Bengali—all of them later proved to be Indian citizens
· Multiple deaths: Workers have been lynched in Odisha, lost body parts in other states and arrested on false charges of being “Bangladeshi infiltrators”
· Sectors affected: Construction, masonry, daily wage labor and informal-sector work
· States involved: Goa, Odisha, Maharashtra, Haryana, Rajasthan, Gujarat and more
The West Bengal government has launched the Shramasree Scheme—offering one-time assistance of Rs 5,000 and a monthly allowance of Rs 5,000 for one year to migrant workers willing to return home. Over 1.2 lakh workers have applied, suggesting that fear-driven migration patterns are reversing.
THE LARGER PATTERN: BEYOND DEBANAND SANA
Sana’s death is not an isolated incident. Consider the recent cases,
· Odisha (December 24): A 30-year-old migrant worker named Jeyel Rana from Murshidabad, West Bengal was brutally beaten to death in Sambalpur after a trivial altercation over a cigarette. Six men attacked him on suspicion he was Bangladeshi—simply because he spoke Bengali.
· Mumbai (April 2025): Two migrant workers, Asit Sarkar and Goutam Barman, were arrested by Mumbai Police on charges of being illegal Bangladeshi immigrants despite having valid Aadhaar, voter IDs and land ownership documents proving they were Indian citizens. Goutam Barman was even a BJP booth president—yet the party didn’t intervene to help him.
· Delhi (June 2025): Seven migrant workers from Bengal were picked up, forced across the border into Bangladesh and only brought back after the West Bengal government escalated the matter.
· Bihar (December 30): A viral video showed an Indian youth being savagely beaten by a mob in Madhubani, accused of being Bangladeshi without evidence.
These aren’t accidents. They’re part of a pattern that Congress leader Adhir Ranjan Chowdhury raised before Prime Minister Narendra Modi himself on December 29, urging immediate intervention.
THE BJP’S RESPONSE: DENIAL & COUNTER-ACCUSATIONS
The BJP has rejected allegations of systematic harassment. Debjit Sarkar, West Bengal BJP spokesperson, dismissed Banerjee’s claims, saying Banerjee was simply “trying to heat up the market” with “Bengali language and Bengali persecution” narratives, claiming “this will not work.”
However, the BJP’s counter-narrative faces credibility challenges
· Police records show detentions of Bengali speakers without “due process”
· Citizenship verification has happened on the streets, not in court
· Deportations occurred before proper documentation review
· In many cases, victims had legal proof of Indian citizenship but were ignored
WHY THIS MATTERS NOW: POLITICAL & HUMAN RIGHTS IMPLICATIONS
This case arrives at a critical moment. West Bengal faces Assembly elections in 2026, making migrant worker harassment a hot-button electoral issue. But beyond politics, it raises fundamental questions about India’s federal structure:
i. Linguistic Discrimination: Can states legally target citizens for speaking their mother tongue.?
ii. Due Process: Are migrant workers being denied basic legal protections.?
iii. Citizenship Rights: How can Indian citizens be deported or harassed based on suspicion alone.?
iv. Inter-State Relations: Why isn’t the central government enforcing uniform protections.?
The West Bengal government has created a dedicated Migrant Welfare Board, launched helplines and initiated legal support—actions that suggest the scale of the problem is being taken seriously at the state level.
═════════════════════════════════════════════════════════════════════
═════════════════════════════════════════════════════════════════════
SOCIAL MEDIA & PUBLIC REACTION
Banerjee’s statements have generated massive engagement,
· Posts about migrant worker harassment trend with millions of impressions
· Hashtags like #SaveBengaliMigrants, #MigrantWorkerRights and #LinguisticDiscrimination are regularly viral
· YouTube videos analyzing the case gather hundreds of thousands of views
· Local news outlets are running 24/7 coverage of related incidents
The narrative has shifted from a localized incident to a national conversation about migrant worker rights, linguistic identity and state-level discrimination.
WHAT HAPPENS NEXT.?
· Police Investigation: Goa Police have filed an “unnatural death” case. The CBI or a special investigation team may be called.
· Legal Battle: Sana’s family is expected to pursue justice through courts, potentially reaching the High Court or Supreme Court.
· Political Escalation: Banerjee has signaled this will be a central campaign issue in the 2026 Assembly elections.
· National Attention: Congress, DMK and other opposition parties are likely to raise the issue in Parliament.
Conclusion: A QUESTION THAT DEMANDS AN ANSWER
Abhishek Banerjee’s question—“What’s their fault.? They’re from West Bengal”—cuts to the heart of the matter. A man traveled to another state to earn his living, as millions of Indians do every year. He was mistaken for a thief, detained and died five days later under circumstances that remain murky.
Whether this was a case of over-policing, administrative negligence, communal violence or something else, the lack of clarity is itself a failure. In a democratic India, migrant workers deserve the same dignity, legal protection and due process as any other citizen.
The Debanand Sana case is no longer just about one man’s death. It’s become a referendum on whether India—a nation built on unity in diversity—can protect the rights of its internal migrant population from discrimination based on language, religion or state of origin.
Call to Action (CTA)
Stay informed on migrant worker rights and state-level discrimination incidents. Follow The Daily Hints for investigative journalism, news analysis and social justice reporting. Share this article with your network to raise awareness about the harassment faced by migrant workers across India. Comment below with your thoughts on this case—what should the government do next.?
Follow and Share The Daily Hints for more breaking news, investigative reports and analysis on issues that matter to India’s working population.
Follow The Daily Hints on Social Media,
§ Threads
§ YouTube
§ Email ID
From West Bengal District’s News to Kolkata News, Other States News to Whole India News, International News, Entertainment News to Sports News, Science News to Technology News and all other news updates, follow and Support our news portal @TheDailyHints.
Leave a Reply
Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *



.jpg)

.jpg)
.jpg)
.jpg)