Darjeeling, June 17: A section of
Gorkha Janmukti Morcha leaders wants the party to contest the Gorkhaland
Territorial Administration (GTA) elections as it is now clear that any
decision on the inclusion of additional plains territory in the proposed
autonomous set-up will take time.
Even though the Morcha is likely to
take a final call on the issue only after the 21-member party
delegation briefs chief Bimal Gurung about the meeting held yesterday
with the state government at Writers’ Buildings, many leaders told The Telegraph that it was about time to contest the elections.
All the delegation members are expected to reach Darjeeling tomorrow.
“Personally, I
think that it is time to contest the elections. Once we get the mandate,
we can pursue the territory issue with the state government in a strong
manner. I think the people from the Dooars and Terai will understand
this aspect,” said a senior Morcha leader.
Officially, the
Morcha has maintained that at the moment the prime issue is about
inclusion of territory and not elections. Morcha president Bimal Gurung
said yesterday: “The issue at the moment is territory, not elections. If
the state government wants to go in for elections it is their choice,
but at the moment we will oppose elections.”
The state
government is, however, expected to issue a notification on the
delimitation of the GTA constituencies later this month followed by a
notification on elections.
After the meeting
in Calcutta yesterday, the state government said a three-member
fact-finding committee headed by Manoj Agarawal, secretary of the North
Bengal development department, would look into the report of the Justice
Shyamal Sen committee.
The committee is expected to place its report before the government after six months.
The Morcha was
peeved that only five of the 396 mouzas demanded by the hill party from
the Dooars and Terai were recommended for inclusion in the GTA. It said
the report was “unfair and humiliating”.
Those in favour of
contesting the elections are likely to argue before the party’s
leadership that delaying the elections now would be detrimental for
Morcha’s support base.
“Once we have the
mandate, the party’s support base will get consolidated. Once this is
taken care of, we can pursue the territory issue strongly. Even if the
statehood agitation is launched immediately, not much headway can be
made unless the adivasi people in the plains are brought into our fold,”
said another leader.
“I personally
believe that instead of renewing the statehood agitation with largely
hill-centric programmes, we should first try and get the adivasi people
on our side,” the leader added.
The state
government, too, tried to convince the Morcha delegation that it should
agree to contest the elections in the areas in the hills.
“They did try to
raise the issue of elections but we told them that we only had the
mandate for our party president to speak on the territory issue and not
the elections. We told the government that the election was something
our party president and the central committee would decide,” said Harka
Bahadur Chhetri, the Kalimpong MLA and Morcha’s spokesperson.
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