Darjeeling, May 15: Mamata Banerjee
today said Darjeeling “is the heart of Bengal” but also clarified
almost immediately that she was not talking politics.
After inaugurating an auditorium at
the Gorkha Rangamanch Bhavan, with Bimal Gurung on the dais beside her,
the chief minister spoke for bringing development to the hills in her
first visit here after January, when she had annoyed the Gorkha Janmukti
Morcha with her speech.
The January 29
event was also a government one like today’s, but Mamata told the crowd
at Chowrastha: “Darjeeling is a part of us.”
Today, the Morcha
chief also spoke in measured words, aware that running the GTA without
the state’s help may prove difficult. Gurung said “misunderstandings”
would be a thing of the past.
“Darjeeling is the
heart of Bengal, please remember this,” Mamata said today. “I don’t
want to talk about politics but we should work together. No provocation,
no dirty politics. Darjeeling is like other parts of my state. I love
my Bengal. I love my Darjeeling.”
The chief minister
spoke about the dip in tourist flow to Darjeeling in March and April
because of “disturbances”. In March, the Morcha had announced a series
of bandhs, which it later called off after talks with central ministers
in Delhi.
At today’s event,
the Morcha supporters heard the chief minister in silence, clapping
occasionally as she rolled out the list of projects that the government
and GTA have planned. Featured in the list were medical colleges in
Darjeeling and Kurseong, a fire station in Mirik, a polytechnic college
at Kalimpong, Rs 2000 crore for a 300MW hydel project and Rs 155 crore
for a drinking water project for Darjeeling.
Morcha leader Roshan Giri, asked about Mamata’s message, said: “Everything was fine. There is no controversy.”
A Morcha leader
said: “The situation has changed now. Moreover, she did not make a
political statement as she had done the last time when she visited the
hills.”
When Mamata had
come to Darjeeling in January, there was tension in the hills over the
Telangana issue. The Morcha leadership was under pressure to press for
statehood. “The situation then was very volatile. The Morcha leaders
tried to convey the message to the chief minister but there were
misunderstandings,” said a senior Morcha leader.
Gurung today
repeated that “misunderstandings” would be a thing of the past. “What
happened then was uncalled for. We are confident that it won’t be
repeated.”
He also admitted
that running the GTA would not be smooth without the state government’s
help. “Without the cooperation of the state government, the hill body
cannot run properly,” he said.
A senior Trinamul
leader said: “Gurung wants to have total control in the hills. Without
the state government’s backing he would find it difficult to meet the
demands of the people. So he has decided to revive the ties with
Mamatadi.”
The Telegraph
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