27 April,2010 09:58 AM IST | | PTI
Air and rail services were hit and normal life disrupted in the city and elsewhere in West Bengal as the 12-hour nationwide strike called by Left and some other non-BJP opposition parties to protest Centre's "failure" to check price rise got underway
Two train passengers were injured as a clash broke out between the passengers of Ganga Sagar Express and bandh supporters at Pandua station in Hoogly district this morning.
Abdul Razzak and Shanti Devi were injured when they along with other passengers tried to stop bandh supporters from stopping the train and putting up a banner.
The bandh shut businesses and disrupted transport services by road, rail and flight operations. Metro railways spokesperson said their services were normal.
ALSO READ
Bharat Bandh: Police lathi-charge protesters for blocking road, rail tracks
Bharat Bandh: Bihar Police lathi-charge protesters for blocking road and rail traffic, 9 arrested
Bharat Bandh: Mixed response in MP; shops ransacked in Chhatarpur
Bharat Bandh against SC order on quota most effective in Bihar, Jhrakhand, tribal belts
Chhattisgarh: Good response for Bharat bandh in tribal-dominated areas
Airport sources said ten out of 25 domestic and international flights took off this morning. While fights of Air-India, Jet Airways and Jetlite took off as scheduled in the morning, services of other private airlines were badly hit with many passengers stranded at the airport.
CPI-M's workers's union CITU affiliated-Airports Authority of India Employees Union office-bearers had said that they would impose strike in the airport.
Eastern Railway spokesperson told PTI that due obstructions put up by bandh supporters at several stations, train services were disrupted at Howrah and Sealdah division.
Long-distance trains were stranded at various stations as bandh supporters sat on the railway tracks.
The streets in Kolkata wore a deserted look with state-run buses, private vehicles, taxis, auto-rickshaws remaining off the road since 6 am as the bandh began.
Shops and educational institutions were closed, officials said. Left Front Chairman Biman Bose said the bandh has been a spontaneous protest against price rise.
Leader of the Opposition and senior Trinamool Congress leader Partha Chatterjee said the Left Front government itself had failed to control price rise and take action against hoarding and black marketing in the state.
State Transport Minister Ranjit Kundu said buses and trams would run if drivers and conductors report for duty.
"I cannot give any assurance. It depends on the employees and do not feel any extra arrangement needs to be made," he said.
The SUCI(C), a Left opposition in West Bengal and Trinamool Congress poll-partner, has called a 24-hour nationwide bandh today. Trinamool Congress, Congress and BJP have opposed the bandh.