Gorkha Janmukti Morcha president Binay Tamang has demanded revision of
the 1950 India-Nepal Treaty, which allows free movement of both
countries’ citizens, and flagged it as an issue central to the Gorkhas’
identity.
“To solve the issue of identity of Gorkhas, the first
and foremost task that needs to be done is a revision of the India-Nepal
Treaty,” Tamang told a conference of the Confederation of North Bengal
& Sikkim Journalists here on Tuesday.
Gorkhas living in the
Darjeeling hills and other parts of India have in the past demanded the
revision and sought restrictions on the movement of residents across the
Nepal border.
Tamang’s call on Monday came weeks after an RTI
reply from the Registrar-General of India (RGI) — under the Union home
ministry — cited apprehensions about the “inflow of Nepalese immigrants”
being encouraged if a demand for Scheduled Tribe status for 10 groups
in the hills was accepted.
The ST status has been a longstanding
demand. The RGI has turned down the proposal twice, though the Bengal
and the Sikkim governments have backed the tag.
Articles six and
seven of the 1950 treaty with Nepal grant free passage, stay, ownership
of property, participation in trade and commerce and other privileges to
residents of both countries on a reciprocal basis.
“Though the
Morcha president did not specify whether he wants restrictions on free
movement of people between India and Nepal, the demand to have a re-look
at the treaty and revise it is significant, particularly after the
RGI’s views became public,” said an observer.
Earlier, a number of other hill parties, including the GNLF and CPRM, had demanded revision of the treaty.
The Telegraph
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