Darjeeling, Nov. 5,TT: The Gorkha
Janmukti Morcha today said the party was “not in a hurry” to elect a new
chief executive for the GTA Sabha and one section feels Bimal Gurung
should be requested to return to the chair.
Morcha president Gurung had
resigned from the post of the chief executive on July 30 and has given
no indication that he would lead the GTA again.
Jyoti Kumar Rai,
the assistant secretary of the Morcha and an executive member of the
GTA, today said: “We are not in a hurry to elect a new chief executive.
We had earlier elected Binay Tamang. The state government has not yet
officially written to us saying Tamang cannot be the chief executive.
Once we receive a communication from the state government, we will sit
for a meeting to decide on the matter. Then the principal secretary
(of the GTA) has to convene a meeting of the Sabha to elect a new chief
executive.”
Tamang had been
elected the chief executive on September 27 as Gurung had quit the post.
But Tamang couldn’t take the oath within a month of his election, as
stipulated by the law, as he was lodged in the Jalpaiguri Correctional
Home.
He was elected to
the post because of the Morcha’s realisation that if the party didn’t
elect a chief executive, the state government may take control of the
body.
Another reason to elect Tamang was to create pressure on the government to release Morcha leaders.
At present, Ramesh Allay, the deputy chief of the GTA Sabha, has been given the power to function as the chief executive.
Tamang is an
accused in a case of attempt to murder and another of arson. He began
an indefinite hunger strike demanding his release. But after he refused
food and water for two days, Tamang was moved to Jalpaiguri district
hospital where he was administered saline on Sunday.
Concerned about
Tamang’s health, a team of Morcha leaders met governor M.K. Narayanan on
Sunday demanding the GTA leader’s release as also that of nearly 1,100
Morcha leaders and activists.
Gurung on earlier instances made announcements but did the opposite after pressure from party supporters.
When the GTA was
formed, Gurung had said he would not contest the elections to the
autonomous body or head it but he did an about-turn heeding the demand
of party workers.
It is unclear if he would heed this time.
Observers say a semblance of normality will not return to the GTA unless a new chief executive is chosen.
Even as the Morcha
is delaying the election of a new chief executive, there is a growing
voice within the party that wants Gurung to assume charge again.
On October 27,
when the Morcha held a public meeting at the Darjeeling Motor Stand,
party activists held up posters that said Gurung should assume charge as
chief executive.
However, in his
address that day, Gurung said he had asked “other leaders” to run the
GTA and he had sacrificed the chair to continue with the Gorkhaland
agitation.
The
Morcha-affiliated Janmukti Asthai Karmachari Sangathan — a union of the
GTA employees — also wrote to Gurung recently “requesting” him to take
charge of the GTA.
He has not responded to the request.
Gurung quit the GTA chief executive’s post at the beginning of the fresh round of statehood agitation.
The Morcha is
right now on the back foot as the administration has not done anything
about releasing the Morcha leaders from jail though the hill party has
told the state government that it will run the GTA.
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