A dispute over wages between LPG transporters and their drivers at the Indian Oil Corporation Ltd's bottling plant in Budge Budge, South 24 Parganas district of West Bengal, intensified into a protest.
The unrest, which took place on Tuesday night, led to a temporary halt in production and sparked sharp political debate.
Senior BJP leader Suvendu Adhikari, who serves as the leader of the opposition in the state assembly, claimed in a post on X that the incident demonstrated the growing lawlessness and "syndicate culture" under the Trinamool Congress (TMC) administration.
He also provided two videos purportedly showing protesters releasing LPG from cylinders, causing panic in the area. However, PTI was unable to independently verify the legitimacy of these videos.
"The protest yesterday, where angry workers discharged gas from cylinders onto the streets, could have resulted in a disaster. A single spark might have set off a huge fire, potentially consuming the entire bottling plant, the nearby Budge Budge Institute of Technology (BBIT) College, Jagannath Gupta Institute of Medical Sciences and Hospital, and nearby areas in a deadly blaze. Lives, properties, and livelihoods were jeopardized due to TMC's unchecked syndicate raj," Adhikari asserted.
He claimed that competing TMC factions were struggling for control over loading and unloading operations, pushing workers to the edge and risking lives.
"This isn't governance; it's a reckless pursuit of power that puts innocent lives in danger," he added.
In response to Adhikari's accusations, TMC spokesperson Debangshu Bhattacharya stated that it was an "industrial protest" and that police promptly took the necessary action.
"Suvendu Adhikari should reflect on his own past. He himself ran syndicates and continues to do so," Bhattacharya alleged.
An Indian Oil official, under anonymity, explained that the issue arose from wage disagreements between transporters and their drivers and had no direct link with the company.
"Due to the unrest, dispatch and production have been disrupted since Saturday. However, we obtained cylinders from other facilities to ensure continued supply. Production at the Budge Budge plant has now resumed," the official mentioned.
The Budge Budge facility typically fills between 45,000 to 50,000 cylinders daily, catering to a large part of Kolkata's LPG demand.
(Only the headline of this report may have been reworked by Editorji; the rest of the content is auto-generated from a syndicated feed.)