Lalchand Fulamali

Lalchand Fulamali (Bengali: লালচাঁদ ফুলমালি) (born November 1935) is an Indian politician, hailing from Brahmanbahara village in Birbhum District.[1] Fulamali became a member of the Communist Party of India in 1957 and represented the party in the West Bengal Legislative Assembly from 1971 to 1977.

Youth

Fulamali was born in Bramhanbahara. His father was Nanigopal Fulamali.[1] He was educated at Bramhanbahara Primary Vidyalaya and completed the 4th grade .[1]

Political worker

Fulamali became a member of the CPI in 1957.[1] He was active in the local area and became a member of the gram panchayat ('village council').[1] In 1962 he was jailed during a food movement.[1] Fulamali stood as the CPI candidate in the Mayureswar (SC) constituency in the 1967 West Bengal Legislative Assembly election; with 5,738 votes (19.28%) he finished in third place behind the Congress and CPI(M) candidates.[2] He did not contest the subsequent 1969 West Bengal Legislative Assembly election.[3] From 1967-1970 he was arrested at a number of times.[1]

Legislator

He was elected to the West Bengal Legislative Assembly in the 1971 election and the 1972 election from the Mayureswar (SC) constituency.[1][4] In 1971 he obtained 10,925 (35.13%) defeating Congress, CPI(M) and Congress(O) candidates.[5] In 1972 he obtained 15,089 (50.74%), defeating the CPI(M) and Congress(O) candidates.[6]

Later period

Fulamali lost the Mayureswar (SC) seat in the 1977 West Bengal Legislative Assembly election, where he finished in third place with 4,760 votes (13.60%).[7] As of 2014 Fulamali was involved in an all-party committee demanding to secure a hospital at Mayureswar.[8]

gollark: Even if you reverse-engineer where it gets the hashes from and how it operates, by the nature of the thing you couldn't work out what was being detected without already having samples of it in the first place.
gollark: Anyway, the generality of this solution and the fact that they'll probably keep the exact details private for "security"-through-obscurity reasons also means that, as I have written here (https://osmarks.net/osbill/) in a blog post tangentially mentioning it, someone could just feed it hashes for, say, anti-government memes and find out who is saving those.
gollark: Although I suppose that *someone* probably keeps the originals around in case they have to change the hashing algorithm.
gollark: It's trickier on images (see how PyroBot does it...) but not impossible. (since you want moderately fuzzy matching, unlike SHA256 and such, which will produce an entirely different hash if a single bit is flipped)
gollark: Through the magic of cryptography, you can condense arbitrarily big files down to a fixed-length fingerprint and check if that matches, with basically-zero false positive risk.

References

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