Gangtok: Former footballer Bhaichung Bhutia on Thursday
announced a new party that would challenge the Sikkim Democratic Front
in the Assembly elections next year.
Bhutia said the Hamro Sikkim Party would be launched to
cleanse the system in his home state where the SDF has been in power for
over two decades.
"The next election will be between (the party with) black
money and clean money," the former India football captain told a news
conference in Delhi.
Bhaichung said the party's formal launch would take place in Sikkim in a few weeks. The Nepali "Hamro" means "ours" in English.
Bhaichung, who had quit the Trinamul Congress early this year
after unsuccessfully contesting two elections in Bengal, said: "The
present system (in Sikkim) has forced us to enter politics. Our party
will be youth and women-oriented, but we will also reach out to all
sections of the people. Our party is Sikkim's party."
Bhaichung hinted that he would not head the new party, and a "clean and credible person" would be at the helm.
"Hamro Sikkim Party has been formed by the people of Sikkim, and we
dedicate the party to them. I am not here to become its president or
chief minister. We will have very clean people in the party."
Six other persons, all youths barring one, from diverse backgrounds were seated beside Bhaichung at the news conference.
The lone senior person was M. N. Dahal, the former spokesman
for the Sikkim Krantikari Morcha, the main opposition party in the
state.
The former footballer identified a number of issues, which, he
said, needed to be addressed and corruption was at the top of the list.
"Number one problem in Sikkim is corruption; unemployment is
the second-most important...These are the issues the government must
address," he said.
Analysts have said Bhaichung would not have it easy in Sikkim,
where chief minister Pawan Chamling stands like a colossus, and his
party seemingly invincible. "In the last Assembly elections in 2014, the
SKM under the leadership of P.S. Golay gave a strong fight, but fell
far short of unseating Chamling. Bhaichung will not find it easy," said
an analyst.
In the lead up to the formation of the party, Bhaichung and
his friends had embarked on a month-long tour of Sikkim dubbed the "Yuva
Yatra".
The Telegraph