The BJP-RSS strategy is similar to that of Mamata Banerjee when she was opposition leader. She was known for claiming almost every murdered person as her party worker/supporter who was killed by the CPI(M). The most famous case was that of Dipali Basak, a deaf and mute girl in Nadia who was raped by a local hoodlum allegedly loyal to the ruling CPI(M). In December, 1992, Mamata, then a junior minister in P.V. Narshima Rao’s cabinet, took her to Writer’s Building and sat on a dharna in front of CM Jyoti Basu’s chamber. When Subhas Mukherjee, the famous Leftist poet, died in his old age, Mamata claimed his body and, ignoring his wife’s wishes, made a gross political show of his funeral. CPI(M) leader Shyamal Chakraborty once commented that TMC workers were always waiting at crematoriums to claim bodies. Also, like the BJP, she used to demand a CBI inquiry into every untoward incident. Bengal has a long history of political violence, and the politics over corpses is not a new phenomenon here. With the passage of time, the actors have merely changed.