A 57-year-old man in West Bengal died by suicide on Tuesday, purportedly leaving behind a note saying the National Register of Citizens was responsible for his death, Chief Minister Mamata Banerjee said.
The man, Pradeep Kar, was found dead at his home in Panihati in North 24 Parganas district, PTI quoted Barrackpore Police Commissioner Muralidhar Sharma as saying.
Sharma said that a diary was recovered from Kar’s house in which “NRC is responsible for my death” was written in one of the pages, The Indian Express reported.
Kar’s family said that he had been “restless” since the Election Commission announced a special intensive revision of electoral rolls in the state, Sharma told The Indian Express.
On Monday, the poll body announced that the exercise would be carried out in 12 states and Union Territories, including West Bengal, where Assembly elections are expected to take place in 2026. The draft rolls will be published on December 9, and the final list on February 7, 2026.
While Kar was born and raised in West Bengal, his father had migrated from Bangladesh, The Indian Express reported.
Concerns have been raised by opposition leaders that the special revision of voter rolls was an attempt to implement the National Register of Citizens “through the backdoor”.
The National Register of Citizens is a proposed exercise to create a list of Indian citizens and to identify undocumented immigrants.
The register was updated in Assam in 2019, after a mammoth scrutiny of ancestral family documents to weed out “illegal immigrants”, and ended up excluding 19 lakh residents of the state. The updated list, however, has not been notified six years on.
A special intensive revision of voter rolls was conducted in Bihar in recent months ahead of the Assembly elections in the state. At least 47 lakh voters in Bihar were excluded from the final electoral roll published by the Election Commission on September 30 after the revision of the list.
The Election Commission however has maintained that the voter roll revision as a clean-up exercise to remove names of the deceased, duplicate entries and undocumented migrants.
57-year-old Pradeep Kar from 4 Mahajyoti Nagar, Panihati, Khardaha (Ward No. 9) has taken his own life, leaving behind a note that says, “NRC is responsible for my death.” What greater indictment can there be of the BJP’s politics of fear and division?
It shakes me to the very…
— Mamata Banerjee (@MamataOfficial) October 28, 2025
On Wednesday, Banerjee accused the Bharatiya Janata Party of spreading fear about the NRC and said the alleged suicide was an indictment of “BJP’s politics of fear and division”.
“It shakes me to the very core to imagine how, for years, BJP has tormented innocent citizens with the threat of NRC, spreading lies, stoking panic and weaponising insecurity for votes,” she said on social media. “This tragic death is the direct consequence of BJP’s venomous propaganda.”
Banerjee alleged that those who “sit in Delhi and preach nationalism” had pushed ordinary Indians to such despair that they were dying in their own land, fearing they would be declared “foreigners”.
“I demand that the central government stop this heartless game once and for all,” she added. “Bengal will never allow NRC, and never allow anyone to strip our people of their dignity or belonging.”
The tragic death of Pradeep Kar must be investigated thoroughly — the cause of suicide can and must be determined only by the law and investigating agencies, not through political rhetoric.
Let’s also get the facts right — there is NO NRC anywhere in the country. Mamata Banerjee… https://t.co/uKZLQlUxI6
— Amit Malviya (@amitmalviya) October 28, 2025
Meanwhile, the Bharatiya Janata Party’s social media cell chief Amit Malviya accused Banerjee of spreading panic for political gain.
Malviya said that Kar’s death should be investigated by law enforcement agencies rather than being used for “political rhetoric”.
He added that there is currently no National Register of Citizens in operation anywhere in the country and alleged that it was the Trinamool Congress, not the BJP, that had “weaponised fear” among refugees and voters.
Malviya also claimed that Banerjee’s remarks were timed to preempt the revision of voter rolls in West Bengal, which, he said, would expose illegal voters in the state.
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