Darjeeling, June 11.TT: The Gorkha
Janmukti Morcha knew from the outset that it was nowhere near getting
the 396 mouzas it had demanded but had banked on a formula followed
during the formation of the Bodoland Territorial Council, among its
other strategies, to see it through, party sources said.
The Morcha knew
that problems of homogeneity and contiguity would come in the way but
had cited the BTC formula followed in neighbouring Assam to try and
convince the Shyamal Sen committee to recommend the inclusion of at
least 60 to 100 mouzas in the GTA, they said.
“We were aware
that contiguity would be a problem to connect all the 396 mouzas and
this was why we were looking for a face-saver in the recommendations.
Anything between 60 and 150 mouzas would have been a face-saver for the
party, which unfortunately we could not find in the recommendations,”
said a senior Morcha leader.
By homogeneity the
high-powered committee meant the presence of a majority of people
speaking a similar language and following the same culture. Contiguity
meant linking one mouza with the other.
“We had told the
committee that if two areas with more than 51 per cent Gorkha population
were separated by one that had less Gorkha population, that too should
be included to maintain contiguity. The mouzas with less Gorkha
population could be included as John Barla, the adivasi leader backing
us, had significant following in these areas. We felt that the middle
mouza could be left out only if there was no majority even after the
Adivasi and Gorkha populations were taken into account,” said one of the
committee members.
“Such a model had been followed when the Bodoland Territorial Council was formed,” he claimed.
The Morcha
members had hoped that forest stretches would be considered as links to
mouzas, making them contiguous. For example, villages like Kumai-Sipchu
and those mouzas demanded in the Nagrakata block of Jalpaiguri district
are not contiguous because of the Chapramari forest that separates them.
But according to the Morcha formula, the Chapramari forest should be
considered the connecting link between the mouzas which would then be
contiguous.
“We understand
that it might not be possible to connect all the 396 mouzas but efforts
should have been made to include a decent number of mouzas so that the
issue would have been settled for once and all,” said a Morcha leader.
Chief secretary
Samar Ghosh had listed four key parameters used by the committee to
arrive at its conclusion — contiguity, homogeneity, compactness and
ground realities.
Bimal Gurung’s
party is unwilling to buy the argument that more mouzas could not be
considered, given the “ground reality” criterion. Under this criterion
if the DGHC areas are not a source of sustenance for a mouza, it would
not be considered for inclusion.
“It is unfair to
say that if people of a mouza depend on Siliguri for sustenance, it
cannot be part of the GTA. We in Darjeeling are also dependent on
Siliguri. To consider where people shop as a ground reality criterion
was not fair. Also, just because some mouzas are adjacent to
international borders of Nepal and Bhutan, they have not been included
in the GTA,” the leader said.
“The best way out
was to have both the pro-inclusion and those against it sit together and
justify their cases mouza-wise. In this manner both the parties would
have been satisfied.”
The Union home
ministry had specified that the mouza-wise linguistic data would be
privy only to Sen because of the “sensitive nature” of the information.
The decision-making power lay only with Sen.
L.B. Pariyar said
he and other three Morcha members on the committee were not consulted
before the final recommendations were made public by Justice Sen.
“How can I say
that I was a member of the committee when the final report does not bear
my signature? It was a one-man commission. The fact that we would not
be consulted before the final recommendations would be drawn up was made
known to us only during the last meeting of the committee on May 29.
Even then, we had lodged a verbal protest but I do not know whether Sen
recorded our protest or not,” Pariyar said.
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