Darjeeling: GJM to ease shutdown on Monday, Tuesday(Sept 9, 10)

GJAC announces two-day respite to shutdown on Sept 9, 10
Darjeeling, Sept 6 : The Gorkha Janmukti Morcha (GJM), spearheading the indefinite shut down demanding statehood for the Gorkhas, on Friday announced relaxation from strike in Darjeeling hills on Monday and Tuesday.

This was announced after the GJM's central committee meeting, which was chaired by party president Bimal Gurung.

After the GJM's meeting, a meeting by the eight-party umbrella organisation Gorkhaland Joint Action Committee (GJAC) also approved the decision to relax the shut down on September 9 and 10.

The GJAC will meet again on September 10 and decide the future program of the agitation.

The GJM has been leading the indefinite shut down of Darjeeling since July 29 demanding Gorkhaland state.

GJM president Bimal Gurung sid they will carry on the ongoing movement until their political goal of statehood demand was not achieved.

Gurung said they have nothing to ask from the state government. "Our demand is with the Centre since it has conceded Telangana," Gurung said.

"The people want to carry out the movement and there is no stopping now," Gurung said as the agitation crippled the economy of hills for over past four weeks.

World famous Darjeeling tea, cinchona cultivation, the cash churning tourism sector and timber trade hit a rock bottom due to the agitation.

Analysts say the situation would become worse when thousands of tea workers would demand Puja bonus from this month end as the team planters already announced loss of revenue for various reasons, including blockade or roads.

Seemingly indifferent to the arguments against the strike, Gurung said, "Development can happen later. We want our identity first."

Meanwhile, life has been badly affected due to the bandh everywhere in the hills of Darjeeling, Kurseong and Kalimpong.

The state government in an affidavit claimed that the economy of Darjeeling suffered a loss of Rs 66 crore in July month.

The affidavit was filed by the state government in the Calcutta High Court on Thursday following a direction of a Division Bench presided by Chief Justice Arun Mishra last week.

The government has asked a compensation of more than Rs 69 crore due to continuous shut down.

--IBNS


GJAC announces two-day respite to shutdown on Sept 9, 10


A two-day relaxation to the ongoing shutdown was today announced by the Gorkhaland Joint Action Committee to facilitate students of residential schools to return to the hills. Commercial establishments will also remain open for the two days although all government offices will continue to observe the bandh.

Addressing the media after nearly two hours of deliberations, GJAC chairman Enos Das Pradhan said, “We took stock of the situation and after a long deliberation decided to provide a two-day relaxation on September 9 and 10 to enable outstation students to get back to their schools. Commercial establishments including banks and vehicular services will also remain open but only for the stipulated two days. However, government offices will not be allowed to open during the relaxation period.”

The GJAC had on Thursday said educational institutions would be kept outside the purview of the strike, but did not specify the date from when, saying an announcement would be made subsequently.

Although all schools have welcomed the decision, they are apprehensive about the two-day respite.

“It is good that educational institutions are being kept open from September 13 onwards. But it is doubtful whether parents will be able to make it to the hills on those two days given the issue of availability of flight and train tickets,” pointed out a school principal not wishing to be named.

The Darjeeling hills have been witnessing a shutdown for more than a month in demand of a separate state. The strike on occasions has been tweaked into the ‘ghar bhitra janta’ and ‘sadak ma janta’ agitations – described by the GJM as the people’s movement – in its bid to skirt a high court verdict declaring strikes illegal.

Meanwhile, the GJAC has hinted the strike may be lifted in the near future. The possibility of normalcy returning has gained ground after some members of a delegation comprising former and current MPs and MLAs who had gone to Delhi returned today after meeting some central leaders.

“We will definitely try to honour the request made by the Union home minister. The team members who arrived today have apprised us about some of the developments that took place in Delhi. A final meeting will take place on September 10 as the remaining members of the delegation will have returned by then,” said the joint action committee’s coordinator Raju Pradhan, who belongs to the GJM.

Union home minister Sushil Kumar Shinde has reportedly requested the GJAC delegation to call off the agitation to facilitate a tripartite dialogue. “We are aware that our agitation is a long-drawn movement and has the support of the people. But we will provide periods of respite in between,” said the GJAC coordinator, adding the committee today also mulled over the prospects of expanding the statehood agitation to regions outside the Darjeeling hills.

Meanwhile, 58 more people were arrested last night in raids across the hills under specific and preventive measure provisions and warrantee cases taking the total persons detained since July 29 to 1,085.(EOIC)

Darjeeling: GJM to ease shutdown on Monday, Tuesday,GJAC announces two-day respite to shutdown on Sept 9, 10

Read latest post filed under political news

Post a Comment

We love to hear from you! What's on your mind?

[blogger][facebook]

Contact Form

Name

Email *

Message *

Powered by Blogger.