Commenting on the Supreme Court notices to the West Bengal Government and some others, including him and his son Chandan Basu, on allotment of land at Salt Lake City in violation of rules since 1977, former state Chief Minister Jyoti Basu Friday said his name was "wrongly dragged" into controversy. "Baseless statements are now being made. I had allotted land according to court ruling," Basu told reporters at the Communist Party of India (Marxist) office in Kolkata.
The veteran Marxist, however, said he had not received any court notice so far. "Let the notice come. I will reply to whatever the court wants to know," Basu who had relinquished the office in 1999, said. To a question on government land quota at Salt Lake, he said that except for some commercial plots, there was no other plot at Salt Lake now.
There was no question of having government quota, Basu said, adding the state government had formed a committee for distribution of commercial plots. Basu said the name of his son Chandan had also been dragged into the land controversy although he had not received any plot at Salt Lake from the chief minister's quota.
"Chandan had got the land through a will from his maternal side," he said. The Supreme Court, on January 23, issued notices to the West Bengal government and Chief Minister Buddhadev Bhattacharjee on a public interest litigation alleging plots in the Salt Lake City had been allotted by flouting rules since 1977.
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