The Jana Andolan Party today accused the Gorkha Janmukti Morcha of
not being serious about the Gorkhaland demand and said politics was all
about development.
Speaking at the first foundation day celebration of the JAP at the
Mela Ground here, party president Harka Bahadur Chhetri dared the Morcha
to hold a seminar and clarify what was meant by the "long-pending
demands of the Gorkhas".
"What we now want to say is let the Morcha form a committee...let
them hold a seminar only on what long-pending demands are. The
Gorkhaland you talk about is not the long-pending demand. If it was
Gorkhaland, they would have written Gorkhaland. There is no mention of
the separate state; no Gorkhaland. Even the Morcha knows it. That is why
they don't tell their MP," Chhetri said.
The BJP manifesto released for the 2014 Lok Sabha elections says the
party will "sympathetically examine and appropriately consider the
long-pending demands of the Gorkhas".
The JAP president, who was the most articulate voice of the Morcha
before quitting the party in September 2015, again dared the Morcha to
force S. S. Ahluwalia, the Darjeeling MP and Union minister of state for
agriculture and parliamentary affairs, to table a Bill on Gorkhaland in
Parliament to prove that it was serious on the separate state issue.
"If Bimal Gurung really wants to start an agitation for a separate
state now, first he must leave the GTA...secondly, ask the MP to resign
or tell the MP to table the Bill (on Gorkhaland) drafted by us in
Parliament. If he doesn't agree, force him to resign. If you can do that
much, then all will shine bright in your favour from tomorrow," he
said.
The JAP had submitted a draft Bill on Gorkhaland to Ahluwalia in
April last year, and asked him to table it in Parliament. Late last
year, Ahluwalia had categorically told JAP youths protesting in front of
his official Delhi residence that he would not do so.
Chhetri said for years, hill politicians had been exploiting people on identity issue, but they actually wanted development.
"We actually want to bring the people around to the real issue:
politics is for development, politics is for (creating) facility. They
say politics is for identity, it may also be for identity, but that is
economic identity," he said.
Speaking earlier, Amar Lama, a JAP national bureau member, said the
time had come to move on from identity politics to the politics of
development. "There has to be development of human resources. We must
preserve our tea and the DHR (Darjeeling Himalayan Railways). They are
our identity. A controversy is being sought to be created by suggesting
that identity is bigger than development. Even after getting states,
racial comments and hate crimes are being faced by the people of the
Northeast...the problem of identity will remain even after getting a
state," he said.
In the course of his speech, Chhetri, who at one time was considered
very close to chief minister Mamata Banerjee, avoided bringing up either
her or the Trinamul Congress whose presence is growing in the hills.(TT)

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