
Who’s responsible for the Chandigarh blast?
That’s the question dividing Punjab’s political leadership right now. Punjab Chief Minister Bhagwant Mann is pointing fingers at the Chandigarh Administration, saying they dropped the ball on security. The BJP isn’t having it — they’re accusing Mann of making excuses instead of fixing the real problems.
The blast has turned into a blame game, with each side claiming the other failed citizens.
Mann’s Take: UT Centre Failed
Mann argues that maintaining law and order in Chandigarh is the responsibility of the Union Territory’s Centre administration, not Punjab. He’s suggesting that lapses in security at the UT level allowed this incident to happen.
The Chief Minister believes the focus should be on how the Chandigarh Administration handled — or didn’t handle — preventive measures. This isn’t just about the blast itself, but about whether officials did their job properly beforehand.
Mann has made it clear that shifting accountability is unacceptable when public safety is at stake.
BJP’s Counter-Attack
The BJP is taking a different angle. They’re pointing to a cascading effect — suggesting that broader governance failures in Punjab are creating the environment where such incidents can occur.
Instead of accepting Mann’s argument about UT Centre responsibility, they’re questioning the overall security setup. The opposition party is essentially saying: look at your own house before blaming others.
This back-and-forth shows how blast incidents immediately become political ammunition in Punjab, regardless of the actual investigation findings.
Why This Matters
The blame game delays real accountability. While politicians argue about jurisdictions and responsibilities, citizens want answers about what actually happened and how to prevent future attacks.
Security in Chandigarh involves both the UT administration and state-level coordination. When there’s tension between leaders, that coordination breaks down — and ordinary people pay the price.
The real question isn’t who should have prevented it, but whether anyone is actually working to prevent the next one. Right now, it looks like politicians are more interested in winning arguments than winning on security.
Investigation agencies will eventually determine what went wrong operationally. But even their findings won’t matter if officials aren’t united in implementing lessons learned.
Chandigarh residents will be watching closely to see whether their leaders put egos aside and work together on strengthening actual security measures.
