Going ahead with her strategy of creating beneficiary groups in the
hills - already there are 10 boards for Lepcha, Tamang, Bhutia, Sherpa,
Mangar, Rai, Kami, Damai, Sarki and Limbu communities - Mamata today
announced the setting up of four more development boards.
The beneficiaries would be people belonging to the Newar, Bhujel
(both Other Backward Classes) and Khas communities and minorities living
in the hills.
The strategy of setting up boards, which the Morcha leadership has
often criticised by calling it an attempt to divide the hill population
along identity lines, has given Trinamul a foothold in an area where the
party did not have a presence four years ago.
The fact that Trinamul has become a force to reckon with in the hills
was clear today as the roads leading to Kalimpong had more tricolour
flags of the party than Morcha flags. Although some Morcha supporters
were camping in Kalimpong, barely a kilometre from Mamata's meeting
venue, with placards demanding a separate Gorkhaland state, the chief
minister made it clear in her speech that she was expecting a change in
the hills where the Morcha is the biggest political force.
"I didn't win in the Lok Sabha (elections). I didn't win in the
Assembly (elections).... I keep coming in the hope that you all will
change one day to make your Darjeeling better. I will keep waiting till
that happens," she said, stressing that she was hopeful of electoral
gains in the hills.
At the fifth foundation day programme of the Lepcha Development Board
at the Mela Ground here, elections were very much on the chief
minister's mind.
"The panchayat and civic polls have not taken place in Darjeeling for
a long time.... I am requesting the (state) election commission to
start the process so that elections can be held," she said.
The four civic bodies in Darjeeling, Kalimpong, Kurseong and Mirik
are under the Morcha and their terms are due to end in November 2016.
The panchayat elections were last held in May 2000, but since then there
has been no consensus among the hill parties - earlier the GNLF and
then the Morcha - and the state government on how to implement the
three-tier panchayat system in the region.
Mamata today launched an attack on the GTA without naming the Morcha
that controls the autonomous body. "Every time there is an election, you
will start politicking and rolling out various lists of demands....
Then, you will not do anything for four-and-a-half years," Mamata said.
Binay Tamang, the assistant general secretary of the Morcha, said the
party was ready for any election. "We are ready for all polls. The
chief minister should ensure election to the three tier panchayat as
agreed in the GTA agreement," he said.
The chief minister played a sentimental card for the local population
when she claimed how her government was pushing for making Kalimpong
subdivision a district.
Though Jana Andolan Party president Harka Bahadur Chhetri had tried
to champion the cause and Mamata had earlier given him credit for being
the prime mover, she chose a different line today. "Nobody told me. I on
my own along with my administration decided to make Kalimpong a new
district," she said.
Sources in Trinamul said that though Chhetri had a good equation with
the ruling party leadership, there were some problems brewing between
him and some local leaders of late. "Our party is making major inroads
in the hills and there is no point giving credit to someone else," said a
Trinamul insider.
The chief minister will be present at the first anniversary of the
formation of the Tamang Board tomorrow and sources said that she would
make some more announcements at the meeting to deal more blows to the
Morcha.
Additional reporting by Rajeev Ravidas in Kalimpong and Vivek Chhetri in Darjeeling(TT)
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