A war of attrition has started between Binay Tamang and Roshan Giri
with each accusing the other of trying to “mislead” the people on
demands to recognise 11 hill communities as Scheduled Tribes (ST).
Tamang,
the Gorkha Janumukti Morcha chief, had on Thursday made public two
official documents from the Union ministry of tribal affairs indicating
that the Registrar-General of India (RGI) had twice “not supported”
Bengal government proposals to include the 11 groups as STs. The Union
home ministry is the RGI’s parent department.
According to the
documents, “only those proposals” recommended and justified by the state
government and concurred with/by RGI and the National Commission for
Scheduled Tribes (NCST) “are to be considered”.
In a social media
statement on Friday accusing Tamang of “misleading” the people, Giri
said: “At the end of the document, it is stated that ‘the report of the
committee is awaited’.”
Giri is a confidant of former Morcha chief Bimal Gurung, a BJP ally
who has been on the run since facing cases over last year’s statehood
agitation in the hills.
According to Giri, the BJP is still
sincere on the demand and the central document mentions that a
committee, formed to examine the issue and make recommendations, is yet
to hand in its report.
Hours after the claim, Tamang issued a statement seeking an explanation from Giri.
“The
letter states that ONLY THOSE PROPOSALS which have been recommended and
justified by the concerned state government and concurred with/by the
Registrar General of India and the National Commission for Scheduled
Tribes (NCST) ARE TO BE CONSIDERED for amendment legislation,” Tamang
stressed in the statement.
“The BJP government is trying to gain
sympathy by having formed this committee. If it was so sympathetic, why
did the RGI reject the proposals sent by the state government?” Tamang
asked.
The Morcha chief said his party “would not let go of the
issue” and “force the BJP government’s appointed committee to submit a
favourable report”. The committee was formed on April 2, 2016, and has
been repeatedly missing deadlines for its report.
Tamang also
requested the leaders of the 11 communities — Bhujel, Gurung, Mangar,
Newar, Jogi, Khas, Rai, Sunuwar, Thami, Yakha (Dewan) and Dhimal — to
“formulate strategies to pressurise the Centre”. “The BJP is trying to
play with the emotions of the hills and is using this committee to keep
alive hopes,” Tamang said.
The Telegraph
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