Darjeeling: Gorkha Janmukti Morcha president Binay Tamang has
claimed that senior party leaders on the run with rival Bimal Gurung
want to join Trinamul.
Tamang said he "had been told" that some of Gurung's loyalists
were in contact with Trinamul leaders and that they had expressed their
desire to join the party.
"This is a development of the last nine to ten days," Tamang, who replaced Gurung as the Morcha chief, said on Sunday.
No senior Trinamul leader wanted to comment on the claims as
political affairs related to the hills are handled by chief minister
Mamata Banerjee or minister Aroop Biswas. Biswas could not be contacted
despite repeated attempts.
Tamang claimed that a leader, who was earlier based in Delhi
and later shifted to Darjeeling, was trying to "liase" for the Gurung
camp leaders.
"I have been told that this person is establishing contact with the
TMC leadership. He is basically trying to seek an escape route as we
have found out that a sum of Rs 1.25 crore meant for cinchona
plantations was deposited in the bank account of his wife," said Tamang.
The Morcha chief highlighted this to drive home the point that
he had safeguarded the party since taking over as its chief late last
year.
"Had I not taken the step then (of revolting against Gurung),
this party (Morcha) flag would have vanished from the hills by now. Look
at those leaders who were calling me a betrayer, they now want to join
the TMC," Tamang, also the chief of the Gorkhaland Territorial
Administration (GTA), said.
Tamang spoke at length on why he had objected to Gurung's
decision to turn the statehood agitation violent last year. "When I told
Bimal Gurung not to indulge in violence, he told me to come and meet
him wearing saris and bangles. I had told him that violence will lead us
nowhere."
According to Tamang, he had asked Gurung to shun violence
after nearly 300kg of gelatine sticks were stolen from a power plant
from near Bijanbari during the last phase of the agitation.
"Even if you read history, there is much planning when an
armed struggled is launched. Here, we had someone suddenly deciding to
indulge in such activities, even though the people had supported our
party for our non-violent philosophy," said Tamang.
Gurung faces a slew of cases related to the violence during
the statehood agitation that began in June last year when the chief
minister was in Darjeeling holding a cabinet meeting. He briefly
surfaced in January this year in Delhi.
Tamang said he feared for the lives of the youths who were
with Gurung at present. "I am getting information that these youths are
given Rs 2,000 (in Nepalese currency) per week. They are leading a
miserable life and being asked not to return home over fears that they
would spill the beans about their whereabouts," said Tamang.
"Just a handful of youths are with him (Gurung) now and I am
hearing that many of them have stopped contacting their family members,"
Tamang added.
The Telegraph
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