<p>Thousands of Leftists on Wednesday joined the funeral procession of an SFI activist, whose death in police custody here triggered outrage cutting across the political divide.<br /><br /></p>.<p>Even West Bengal Chief Minister Mamata Banerjee was on the defensive as she called the Tuesday death of Sudipto Gupta “unfortunate” and pledged to help his distraught family.<br /><br />The West Bengal Human Rights Commission ordered a probe into his death. Noted filmmaker Mrinal Sen blamed Banerjee.<br /><br />Gupta, 24, a post-graduate student of Rabindra Bharati University and a leader of the Students Federation of India, died allegedly after policemen assaulted him in custody.<br />The SFI is the student wing of the Communist Party of India-Marxist (CPM).<br /><br />Left activists said Gupta was “mercilessly beaten” while he and other students who had staged a protest seeking elections in colleges were being taken in a bus to the Presidency Correctional Home. <br /><br />In the process, Gupta reportedly fell from the bus and collapsed after crashing against a lamp post, said an SFI member.<br /><br />“He was hit on his head so hard that one of his eyes popped out,” added West Bengal SFI joint secretary Shatarup Ghosh.<br /><br />Police said the death was an accident.<br /><br />Chief Minister Banerjee said many activists of her Trinamool Congress party too had died when their heads accidentally hit electric posts while travelling on trains.<br /><br />“Any death is unfortunate. I shall not speak any more on this,” she said.<br /><br />Gupta’s body, wrapped in the CPI-M’s red flag, was taken in a flower-bedecked hearse from the hospital to the Netaji Nagar College where he was general secretary of the students’ council. <br /><br />Grieving students and teachers offered floral tributes amid cries of “Lal Salam!”<br />The body was then taken to Gupta’s residence where his father broke down.<br /><br />The inconsolable 63-year-old Pranab Gupta, a widower, said his son “used to dream of a new social order, a new dawn”.<br /><br />He said he would not let the death go in vain and fight for justice. <br /><br />Helped by CPM and SFI leaders, the grieving father wobbled towards the vehicle, folded his hands, and then placed flowers on the body.<br /><br />Taking suo motu cognizance of the death, the West Bengal Human Rights Commission ordered the Kolkata police commissioner to submit a report in seven days.<br /><br />The commission has also formed its own investigating team and will examine witnesses and other evidence cause of Gupta’s death. <br /><br />Mrinal Sen said Mamata Banerjee was to blame for the death.<br /><br />“Who is responsible? The one who rules the state, under whom the police are, that is the chief minister is responsible for this death,” Sen said.<br /><br />Even the Congress voiced dismay.<br /><br />“With (Trinamool) taking over, we had thought the state will witness change. What I see is the politics of police killing students ... has come back,” state Congress president Pradip Bhattacharya said.<br /><br />The death in Kolkata triggered protest demonstrations in Chennai, Kerala and New Delhi.<br />In the national capital, over 100 students of Jawaharlal Nehru University staged a noisy protest outside Banga Bhavan, which belongs to the West Bengal government.<br /><br />Some students tried to scale the boundary wall but were stopped by police.</p>
<p>Thousands of Leftists on Wednesday joined the funeral procession of an SFI activist, whose death in police custody here triggered outrage cutting across the political divide.<br /><br /></p>.<p>Even West Bengal Chief Minister Mamata Banerjee was on the defensive as she called the Tuesday death of Sudipto Gupta “unfortunate” and pledged to help his distraught family.<br /><br />The West Bengal Human Rights Commission ordered a probe into his death. Noted filmmaker Mrinal Sen blamed Banerjee.<br /><br />Gupta, 24, a post-graduate student of Rabindra Bharati University and a leader of the Students Federation of India, died allegedly after policemen assaulted him in custody.<br />The SFI is the student wing of the Communist Party of India-Marxist (CPM).<br /><br />Left activists said Gupta was “mercilessly beaten” while he and other students who had staged a protest seeking elections in colleges were being taken in a bus to the Presidency Correctional Home. <br /><br />In the process, Gupta reportedly fell from the bus and collapsed after crashing against a lamp post, said an SFI member.<br /><br />“He was hit on his head so hard that one of his eyes popped out,” added West Bengal SFI joint secretary Shatarup Ghosh.<br /><br />Police said the death was an accident.<br /><br />Chief Minister Banerjee said many activists of her Trinamool Congress party too had died when their heads accidentally hit electric posts while travelling on trains.<br /><br />“Any death is unfortunate. I shall not speak any more on this,” she said.<br /><br />Gupta’s body, wrapped in the CPI-M’s red flag, was taken in a flower-bedecked hearse from the hospital to the Netaji Nagar College where he was general secretary of the students’ council. <br /><br />Grieving students and teachers offered floral tributes amid cries of “Lal Salam!”<br />The body was then taken to Gupta’s residence where his father broke down.<br /><br />The inconsolable 63-year-old Pranab Gupta, a widower, said his son “used to dream of a new social order, a new dawn”.<br /><br />He said he would not let the death go in vain and fight for justice. <br /><br />Helped by CPM and SFI leaders, the grieving father wobbled towards the vehicle, folded his hands, and then placed flowers on the body.<br /><br />Taking suo motu cognizance of the death, the West Bengal Human Rights Commission ordered the Kolkata police commissioner to submit a report in seven days.<br /><br />The commission has also formed its own investigating team and will examine witnesses and other evidence cause of Gupta’s death. <br /><br />Mrinal Sen said Mamata Banerjee was to blame for the death.<br /><br />“Who is responsible? The one who rules the state, under whom the police are, that is the chief minister is responsible for this death,” Sen said.<br /><br />Even the Congress voiced dismay.<br /><br />“With (Trinamool) taking over, we had thought the state will witness change. What I see is the politics of police killing students ... has come back,” state Congress president Pradip Bhattacharya said.<br /><br />The death in Kolkata triggered protest demonstrations in Chennai, Kerala and New Delhi.<br />In the national capital, over 100 students of Jawaharlal Nehru University staged a noisy protest outside Banga Bhavan, which belongs to the West Bengal government.<br /><br />Some students tried to scale the boundary wall but were stopped by police.</p>