Scandal Fulll - Nalban Kolkata
Roshni Chatterjee was a crime reporter for The Kolkata Chronicle . She had won a National Award for exposing the Sandeshkhali ration scam. Nalban was her refuge. She rowed there every Sunday. When the fish started dying, she didn't buy the "algal bloom" story.
He serves tea to anglers and tells them one thing: "Don't trust the water. Trust your eyes." Nalban Kolkata Scandal Fulll
For decades, Nalban was more than just a water body in the heart of Salt Lake City, Kolkata. It was the city’s eastern lung—a sprawling 300-acre wetland where morning mist mixed with the cry of kingfishers. Anglers pulled out bhetki and tangra before dawn, and families rented paddleboats on winter afternoons. Roshni Chatterjee was a crime reporter for The
Three luxury SUVs—a black BMW, a white Fortuner, and a Mercedes with tinted glass that reflected lightning—pulled up to the restricted zone behind the boating club. Men in safari suits got out. Bhola recognized one of them: Debashish "Debu" Ganguly, the Mayor-in-Council (MIC) of Parks and Environment. He was the man who signed the checks for Nalban’s "restoration." She rowed there every Sunday
Debu nodded. "Make sure the tapping is invisible. And Bhola?"
ACP Sen arrived at Bhola's hut in the fishing village of Nayapatti at 3 AM. But Debu's men had been faster. The hut was a skeleton of burnt bamboo. Bhola Nath's body lay face-down in the mud, a single bullet hole behind his ear. On his chest, someone had placed a dead bhetki fish—a signature.




