Darjeeling, Aug. 12: The Gorkha
Janmukti Morcha today announced a relaxation of its indefinite strike
from August 16 to 18 and said it would choose a successor to Bimal
Gurung in the GTA Sabha, the twin moves aimed at blunting the state
government’s attempts to corner the party.
In the morning, Gurung chaired an all-party meeting at which seven hill outfits endorsed the August 13-14 janata curfew he had announced on Saturday in response to Mamata Banerjee’s 72-hour deadline to end the strike.
August 15 remains a bandh-free day.
“Eight parties
present at the meeting today in the Darjeeling Gymkhana Club have
adopted a resolution that the Gorkhaland agitation will be carried
forward under one platform and everyone will have one common programme,”
Morcha spokesperson Harka Bahadur Chhetri said.
The coming
together of the parties means the government would have to broaden its
crackdown on hill leaders, a source said. So far, only Morcha leaders
have been arrested.
If on August 16
the Morcha members pick Gurung’s successor in the GTA, the party will be
able to counter the state government’s plan to name its own choice to
the post.
The issue of the
GTA Sabha was discussed in today’s meeting, which suggested that all
big decisions on the statehood agitation would now be taken by consensus
by the eight hill outfits.
The meeting,
called by the Morcha, was attended by the Communist Party of
Revolutionary Marxists (CPRM), Akhil Bharatiya Gorkha League, the hill
Congress, BJP, Gorkhaland Rajya Nirman Morcha and the apolitical
outfits, Bharatiya Gorkha Parisang and the Gorkhaland Task Force.
The GNLF, Trinamul and the CPM stayed away.
Chhetri said that
when the GTA issue was discussed today, “all the parties agreed that the
body must be rejected but… at an appropriate time”.
Bhupendra Pradhan,
chairman of the Sabha, said: “As the chairman of the GTA Sabha, I will
ask the principal secretary to convene a meeting of the Sabha at 1pm on
August 16. The meeting will be held to elect the next chief executive of
the GTA.”
The name of Birkhu Bhusal, 86, a nominated Morcha member, is doing the rounds.
The Morcha later
went into a huddle with its GTA Sabha members, MLAs and central
committee members. Afterwards, Morcha general secretary Roshan Giri
announced the three-day strike relaxation looking “into the concerns of
our people”.
He said an
all-party meeting would also be held on August 16 “when the future
course of agitation after August 18 will be discussed”.
The chief minister
had written to the deputy chief executive of the GTA Sabha giving him
three days’ notice to elect a new chief executive. That deadline expired
today.
Govt ‘normalcy’ plan for hills Transport and shops in focus
Calcutta, Aug. 12: The state
government has adopted a two-pronged strategy to tackle the statehood
strike called by the Gorkha Janmukti Morcha — arranging supply of
essentials on one side and using the local administration to ensure that
shopowners keep businesses open.
The 72-hour deadline that chief minister Mamata Banerjee had set for the Morcha to withdraw the strike ended today.
Trinamul minister
Gautam Deb today said in Siliguri: “The 72-hour deadline will end
tomorrow. We will hold a high level-meeting at my Siliguri office and
chalk out the plan to distribute rations, medicines and other essentials
to the people in the hills. Thousands of people are in distress and
we will open all existing ration shops to distribute foodgrain. If
required, we would also set up camps to distribute food.”
The announcement
is significant as there have been reports from different parts of the
hills that people are facing difficulties because of the indefinite
strike that started on August 3.
Aware that the
deficit in supply of essentials may result in resentment at the ground
level, the Morcha leadership has already started distributing food
items, even cooked food, in some parts of the hills. It has also
announced a three-day relaxation of the strike from August 16-18.
At Writers’, officials said the government was keen to be “visible” in the hills and be seen as restoring “normality”.
State food
minister Jyotipriya Mallick, home secretary, food commissioner and the
transport secretary will reach Siliguri tomorrow to meet Deb.
As part of the strategy, NBSTC buses would ply between the hills and plains from Wednesday.
Transport minister Madan Mitra said if somebody wanted to travel to and from hills, the government would make arrangements.
“State-run buses
will ply to ensure hassle-free travel. If anyone wants to obstruct
government transport movement, they will be dealt with strictly,” he
said.
“The transport
minister may come here tomorrow to chalk out the plans to run buses. We
want to make it clear that the state will take all possible steps to
restore normalcy in the hills for the sake of common people who are
suffering,” Deb, who is the north Bengal development minister, said.
Besides making its
presence felt in the hills, the administration has started building
pressure on the local traders so that they open their shops.
“We have visited
the houses of 17 traders in Darjeeling town and examined their trade
licences last night. The traders were cautioned that their licences
might be cancelled if they do not open their shops once the 72-hour
deadline announced by the chief minister is over,” said an officer of
the district administration.
The state
government can initiate action against traders under the provisions of
the West Bengal Shops and Establishment Act, 1963.
“The high court
has already… directed the state government to initiate measures to
restore normalcy in the hills. This order has given us enough liberty
to implement the norms mentioned in rule books that may include
cancellation of trade licences,” said the officer.
“Our visit served a
message to the traders.... We don’t know how much it will help us, but
it will definitely spread fear among the traders in the hills,” said an
officer of the district administration.
The Telegraph
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