Why Just Sharmistha? Mamata Banerjee Must Answer for Selective Outrage

Harshita Rai
By Harshita Rai

Sharmistha Panoli is not a political heavyweight. She isn’t a celebrity, nor a party spokesperson. She’s a 22-year-old law student — someone trying to find her voice in a noisy, often unforgiving online world. And yet, that voice, filled with youthful frustration and nationalistic anger after a deadly terror attack, was enough to get her arrested.

Yes, Sharmistha’s video was aggressive — she used harsh words while condemning Pakistan and Islamist extremism after 26 innocent Indians were killed in the Pahalgam terror attack. She was angry. She called out not just the terrorists, but the silence of Bollywood — questioning why those who often preach peace remained unmoved when Indian blood was spilled. She was emotional, upset, and, like many young Indians, deeply disillusioned by the selective outrage around her.

But was that enough to criminalise her? Was it enough to send a police team across state lines, drag her into custody, and slap serious legal charges under the Bharatiya Nyaya Sanhita?

Sharmistha didn’t hide. She deleted the video. She issued an apology. She acknowledged that her words hurt some, and expressed regret. That should have been the end of it — a lesson learned, a moment of growth. Instead, the state chose to make an example of her.

Meanwhile, elected leaders in West Bengal freely mock Sanatan Dharma — calling it “gandha dharm” (a filthy religion). Where are the police teams then? Where are the arrests? The apologies? The outrage?

What’s happening here isn’t justice. It’s politics. It’s selective outrage dressed as legal action. It’s a message to every young Indian who dares to speak up — that your voice is safe only if it fits the narrative of the day.

And it’s heartbreaking.

Because Sharmistha is not just a name in a headline. She could be any one of us — a student trying to express her grief and rage in a deeply polarised environment. Instead of a warning and guidance, she got handcuffs.

Even internationally, her case has drawn concern. Dutch MP Geert Wilders — known for his controversial views — called her arrest “a disgrace for freedom of speech.” His words sting not because of who he is, but because they hold a mirror to our own hypocrisy.

Mamata Banerjee must answer: why is a 22-year-old girl treated like a criminal, while her own party leaders go unchecked after religious slurs? Why is one angry student’s outburst a crime, but a sitting MP’s hate speech just “free expression”?

This isn’t about defending every word Sharmistha said. It’s about protecting the space for young Indians to learn, speak, and even stumble — without fear that one wrong sentence will destroy their future.

To silence her is not strength. It’s fear. And that fear, Madam Chief Minister, belongs not to Sharmistha Panoli — but to those who cannot tolerate dissent unless it comes with a party logo.

Justice cannot be selective. Nor should empathy. And right now, this country owes both to a 22-year-old student who spoke from the heart — and is paying for it with her freedom.