Tourist vehicle operators across Sikkim have threatened they would
not allow any taxis bearing Bengal registration numbers to enter the
hill state unless the permit issue is resolved within a few days even as
the government in Bengal is trying to seal a reciprocal transport
agreement.
Bengal and Sikkim had struck a reciprocal transport agreement on
April 9, 2007, wherein vehicles from Bengal could enter only three
Sikkim towns - Gangtok in East, Pelling in West and Namchi in the South.
Vehicles from Sikkim though could move all over Bengal.
According to the agreement, sources in the Bengal's transport
department said, all vehicles that have been included in the agreement
could enter Bengal with a permit issued to them.
After entering Bengal, these permits had to be countersigned at
different entry points. The vehicles included under the agreement are
buses, goods vehicles as well as contract carriages.
This agreement was cancelled on August 30 as tourist vehicle
operators in Bengal have been long complaining to chief minister Mamata
Banerjee about how several thousands of operators were taking a beating
because of the truncated movement of vehicles to Sikkim.
"We had repeatedly drawn the attention of the chief minister about
how tourists planning to visit Sikkim from New Jalpaiguri were facing
problems. If someone had to reach Gangtok, he would have to get off a
vehicle bearing Bengal's registration number, hire a vehicle of Sikkim
and then reach the hotel," said Samrat Sanyal of the Eastern Himalaya
Travel and Tour Operators' Association.
"It's time that both the states agreed to sea-mless connectivity."
In September 2015, Bengal chief minister Mamata Banerjee had written
to her counterpart in Sikkim, Pawan Chamling, requesting that all
tourist vehicles entering the Himalayan state be given access to all
points in the hill state. Over the next few months with no response
reaching Nabanna, Bengal decided to terminate the agreement in August
after nearly a decade.
"Since then we have sent several letters asking for a mutual
agreement. But there was no response," a transport department official
in Bengal said.
In October, the department sent a senior officer to Siliguri and
Sikkim for a thorough understanding of the situation. A report to the
government submitted later that month identified key problems, including
how jeeps, taxis and other vehicles were entering Bengal without
bothering for any counter-signature of the permits.
Sikkim was running few buses and more small vehicles, including jeeps
and taxis, resulting in congestion on its hilly roads. Most of these
vehicles belonged to the category, which were not included in the mutual
agreement.
Operators in Sikkim today rose in protest after the regional
transport authorities started slapping fines on each vehicle that didn't
have its permit countersigned.
"They are imposing on us a fine of Rs 4,000 for one vehicle for not
having a countersigned permit. This is too much. The passengers are
getting harassed and those vehicles that don't have permits are being
asked to return," said Dawa Tamang, a driver in Gantok.
Around 3,000 taxis including trucks from Sikkim enter Bengal
everyday. In contrast, only 1,500 tourist vehicles reach Sikkim
everyday.
The members of different driver and vehicle associations also
highlighted how vehicles of Sikkim have to get two different permits for
Darjeeling and Jalpaiguri districts. On the contrary, vehicles from
Bengal plying to Sikkim need to have only one permit for travel.
Operators today met transport secretary SBS Bhaduria to voice their grievances.
A meeting has been scheduled on December 7 between the transport
secretaries of the two states to address the issue. "Hopefully we will
arrive at a solution," said a transport official in Calcutta.(TT)
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