Tag Archives: Firhard Hakim – Mayor of Kolkata – 2018

‘Faced many challenges as Mayor… I tried to solve problems from the streets, not from my chamber’

“To monitor the Covid-19 situation, every night I used to visit safe homes and oxygen parlours to see if everything is in the right condition or not,” said chairperson of administrative board of Kolkata Municipal Corporation Firhad Hakim.

Kolkata, WEST BENGAL :

Chairperson of administrative board of Kolkata Municipal Corporation Firhad Hakim. (Express photo)

Firhad Hakim, chairperson of administrative board of Kolkata Municipal Corporation and former Mayor, speaks to Atri Mitra on his tenure at the helm of KMC and his vision for the city.

You became Mayor of Kolkata at a crucial juncture.

When I became Mayor, (in November, 2018) within a few months, Covid-19 came to India. After that, lockdown. Then Cyclone Amphan came. I faced the challenges one by one.

In the initial days of the pandemic, even ambulance drivers were wary of taking patients to hospitals. Dead bodies were dumped at hospitals. Residents around crematoriums objected to bodies of Covid patients being brought for cremation.

We started cremation at our crematorium at Dhapa but some local residents of Dhapa pelted stones. They ransacked a van. Kolkata’s image took a hit. But we then reached out to people slowly and ensured that the cremation of Covid victims was done smoothly.

We also started sanitisation work across Kolkata. [Actor] Amitabh Bachchan also praised our work and said, “if Kolkata can, why not Mumbai?”

What were the challenges posed by Cyclone Amphan?

When we are just recovering from the Covid situation, Amphan came and within one night, all of Kolkata was affected. We accumulated our entire work force in one place. Chief Minister Mamata Banerjee requested Odhisha for help. They sent a team of experts. Then, within 3-4 days, we were able to restore normalcy in Kolkata. Many people can criticise us but they should understand that when Amphan happened, my mayorship was not completed one year and this type of cyclone had not happened in Kolkata in the past 100 years or so. But we fought it unitedly and succeeded.

What is the biggest challenge you faced during your tenure as Mayor?

There were several. Now, we are facing challenge of substantial rainfall. I tried to solve problems from the streets, not from my chamber.

To monitor the Covid-19 situation, every night I used to visit safe homes and oxygen parlours to see if everything is in the right condition or not. Whether people are getting proper service or not. A former mayor (Shovan Chatterjee) may criticise me sitting in his residence but no one knows what he would have done if he had been in my situation.

The opposition is alleging that this board did not do enough to tackle waterlogging in
the city.

One has to understand that rain and nature seem to be changing pattern. In the past, we never saw such floods in Kedarnath and Badrinath. Never saw a situation where Chennai, Mumbai, and even Delhi and Ahmedabad are facing flooding.

You have to give time. We have been planning. We are exploring new ways to drive away water. We talked with irrigation department to dredge the canals, too.

If you are again elected as Mayor, what is your plan?

First, I aim to improve the city’s sewerage system and sort out the waterlogging problems. We will call up experts to review the sewerage system of Kolkata and then we need full-fledged planning for this.

source: http://www.indianexpress.com / The Indian Express / Home> Cities> Kolkata / by Arti Mitra, Kolkata / December 18th, 2021

Mamata gives Kolkata its first Muslim mayor since independence

Kolkata, WEST BENGAL :

Firhard Hakim, a state minister, is all set to take up the additional role.

Firhard Hakim and Atin Ghosh along with West Bengal Chief Minister Mamata Banerjee | Salil Bera
Firhard Hakim and Atin Ghosh along with West Bengal Chief Minister Mamata Banerjee | Salil Bera

For the first time since independence, a Muslim face is all set to become the mayor of Kolkata. Firhard Hakim, the municipal affairs and urban development minister of West Bengal, is all set to take up the additional role of the mayor of the 94-years-old corporation. Chief Minister Mamata Banerjee has also decided to change the deputy mayor by replacing incumbent Iqbal Ahmad with Atin Ghosh, a Member Mayor-in-Council (MMiC).

It was a role reversal in Kolkata corporation as Banerjee had earlier chosen a Hindu mayor and a  Muslim deputy mayor. Syed Muhammad Usman, a Bengal Praja Party member, was the last Muslim mayor of Kolkata in undivided Bengal which had comprised of West Bengal and East Bengal (now Bangladesh). The party was formed by A.K. Fazlul Huqe, who later became the home minister of Pakistan and then the governor of East Pakistan (now Bangladesh)

Hakim is known to be very close to Banerjee and her nephew Abhishek.

A meeting of the corporation councilors was called on Wednesday evening to get Hakim elected. Interestingly, Sovan Chatterjee, who resigned as mayor earlier in the day, has not been invited despite being a councilor.

Chatterjee was very careful while addressing the media shortly after sending his resignation to the corporation chairperson through his personal security staffers. He did not lash out at Banerjee, but hinted at many things

Terming his association with Banerjee for last 40 years as an emotional one, Chatterjee said, “That full moon looks like a burnt chapati today.”

When asked about his future plan of action in politics, Chatterjee said that he continues to be a member and MLA of Trinamool Congress.

“But I would have no hesitation if Mamata di asked me to resign from both,” said he. Replying to a question on whether he would be joining the Bharatiya Janata Party, as such speculation is in the air, Chatterjee said he would not respond to every other rumour.

“You would come to know what would be my future course of action at an appropriate moment,” he said.

Differences between Banerjee and Chatterjee were evident from the words of the latter, who said that instead of resigning on his own, “an instruction was sent to me to resign from the state cabinet”.

“For the last 40 years, whatever she asked me to do, I did all of them even without applying my mind. I am such a follower of her,” Chatterjee said.

After Mukul Roy, he is the second political heavyweight in Trinamool Congress who has distanced himself from Banerjee.

Chatterjee also denied reports that his relation with a college teacher was the reason behind his resignation from the ministry and as the mayor.

“In fact, I am totally in the dark on what the reason was,” said he.

Sources, however, said that Chatterjee would not jump off the TMC boat immediately. He will wait and watch before finalising the future course of action.

source: http://www.theweek.in / The Week / Home> News / by Rabi Banerjee / November 22nd, 2018