Gorkha Janmukti Morcha (GJM) announced an indefinite strike in the
Darjeeling Hills from Saturday to press for its Gorkhaland demand.
GJM
chief Bimal Gurung resigned as chief executive of the Gorkhaland
Territorial Administration - an autonomous and elected hill development
council which the party has been running for a year.
"He (Gurung) today (Tuesday) faxed his resignation to the governor (M.K. Narayanan)," said GJM general secretary Roshan Giri.
With
the hills already paralysed following a 72-hour shutdown called by his
party since Monday, Giri said an indefinite shutdown will be organised
from Saturday to raise the pitch for Gorkahland.
"We will go for
indefinite shutdowns and our movement will not stop until our demand for
Gorkhaland is met. We have already advised students to leave the hills
and go to the plains," he said.
"Once the present 72-hour shutdown
ends on Wednesday, we will give a two-day respite to the people to
stock provisions and the tourists and the students to leave. The
indefinite shutdown will begin Saturday," he said.
"We have called
an emergency meeting tomorrow (Wednesday) where we will chalk out our
strategy. The other GTA members will also resign soon," he said.
"The
UPA has allowed the formation of Telengana. Now we are left with no
choice but to intensify our movement for Gorkhaland. Our demand for a
separate state is far more older than Telangana," Giri said.
The
Gorkhaland movement has left many dead over the past two decades besides
affecting the region's economy based on tea, timber and tourism.
On
July 18, 2011, a tripartite agreement was signed between the GJM and
the state and central governments for setting up the (GTA, armed with
more powers than its predecessor -- the Darjeeling Gorkha Hill Council
formed in the late 1980s.
The GJM now runs the Gorkhaland
Territorial Administration after sweeping its maiden elections held in
July 2012. The Trinamool had pulled out of the polls.
Newstrack
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