Aug. 6: Sixteen women members of
Gorkhaland Personnel were arrested for allegedly ransacking a police
out-post at Teesta in Kalimpong subdivision yesterday morning.
Police said they
picked up the 16 from Naxalbari this morning while they were purportedly
planning to cross over to Nepal. All the arrested were remanded in jail
custody for 14 days by a court in Siliguri. One of the charges slapped
against them — Section 353 of the IPC (assault or criminal force to
deter public servant from discharge of his duty) — is non-bailable.
In all, 111 Morcha activists and GLP cadres have been arrested, Darjeeling police superintendent Kunal Aggarwal said today.
Assistant public
prosecutor, Sudip Roy Basunia said the female cadres of the GLP were
part of a 350-strong mob that had vandalised the Teesta police out-post
around 9.45am yesterday.
“The attackers
snapped the telephone connection, ransacked the office furniture and
fled. Since then, police had been in search of them,” said Basunia.
The lawyer said
the police had come to know that the GLP members had assembled near
Jabra More in Naxalbari (90km from Teesta) with an intention to enter
Nepal to evade the arrest. “The police rushed to the spot and arrested
them,” he added.
The Teesta
out-post is under the Kalimpong police station and is 50km from
Siliguri. Naxalbari is around 30km from Siliguri and is on the border
with Nepal.
All the 16 women,
aged between 20 and 26, were produced in the additional chief judicial
magistrate’s court in Siliguri this afternoon.
They were charged
under Sections 147 (punishment for rioting), 149 (unlawful assembly),
186 (obstructing public servant in discharge of public functions), 353
(assault or criminal force to deter public servant from discharge of his
duty), 427 (mischief causing damage to the amount of fifty rupees) and
506 (punishment for criminal intimidation) of IPC.
Section 3
(mischief causing damage to public property) of the Prevention of Damage
to Public Property Act 1984, has also been slapped on the women.
“Judge Santosh
Pathak heard the case and ordered 14 days’ jail custody for all the 16.
As the situation in the hills is not peaceful and there is an
apprehension of a breach in law and order there, the accused will be
sent to Siliguri Correctional Home,” said Basunia.
The GLP is a
voluntary force raised by the Gorkha Janmukti Morcha, ostensibly for
crowd management during the rallies organised by the outfit.
Thirteen members
of the GLP had been arrested on Sunday night in connection with attacks
on government properties across the hills on August 1.
Several Morcha
leaders from the Terai, including Shankar Adhikari, the convenor of the
outfit’s Terai committee, reached the court when the 16 women were
brought there. A large number of police personnel were present on the
court premises to maintain law and order.
As the cadres were
being taken to the court lock-up, four-five supporters of the Rashtriya
Shiv Sena, an organisation opposed to the Morcha, shouted
anti-Gorkhaland slogans. The police intervened and moved them from the
spot.
Sources said the
arrested GLP cadres were both from the hills and the plains. Nine of
them are from Kalimpong subdivision, while one each is from Darjeeling
and Kurseong subdivisions. Three belong to the Dooars and two are from
Siliguri.
GLP chief Ramesh
Allay disputed the claim that the women had been arrested from
Naxalbari. “All these girls were picked up from a construction site at
Gorubathan in Kalimpong last night. They were posted there to protect
materials collected for building a college by the GTA. The police have
framed false charges against them to disintegrate the GLP,” said Allay,
who is also the deputy chief of the GTA Sabha.
“Are they (state government) trying to push us into jungles?” he asked.
The Telegraph
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