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The price of freedom

Batasia-Loop-War-Memorial

The price of freedom

I read a news piece today, shared by a friend of mine; it told the story of a young lady Deepika Mukhia and her son Utsav. Deepika’s husband Uttam Mukhia of 17 J&K Rifles had become martyr defending the country against terrorists in Kashmir and was given a Sena Medal for gallantry.

The story included a rhetorical piece which I wanted to share with you all, “… as many as 34 Gorkha soldiers, most of them in their early twenties, have been martyred in Operation Rakshak (counter-insurgency in Kashmir) and the Kargil conflict (Operation Vijay). Casualties do not deter this warrior race. It only spurs war widows to turn their sons into soldiers.”

It fills our heart with pride to read such a flattering comment, and I am sure those of us who read the piece felt a sense of elation that we belong to this “warrior race.” Honestly, I felt pride too, but it got me thinking and I questioned myself, is this all that there is to it? Is our destiny written in such a way that all we will ever be known as is a “warrior race”? Nothing wrong in that, I am sure, many communities would give an arm and a leg to be called so. But I guess we need to seriously ponder and reflect on where we stand as a community and how others perceive us.

The Mercenaries

There are a certain section of people who have this notion that all the Gorkhali’s were recruited by the British to fight against the “Indians”. Some of the so called “intelligentsia” based in Siliguri that are heading organizations such as Amra Bangali, Banga O Bangal Bhasha Bachao Samity, Jan Jagaran Mancha, Jan Chetna Mancha and many mainstream politicians etc have time and again claimed that the Gorkhali’s are nothing but “mercenaries”.

I wonder what these so called intellectuals would call the Jats or the Punjabis or the Marathas? If we go by the logic that those who were serving in the army under the British rule were “mercenaries”, then should the definition not extend to other regiments that were created by the British?

The very persons, who cite Jaliawala Bagh Massacre, as an example of Gorkhalis acting as mercenaries, forget to mention the role Indian Army played in Operation Blue Star in Punjab. Were the soldiers who obeyed the order to move into holiest of the holy Sikh religious shrine “mercenaries” as well? Or were they being good soldiers and obeying orders? It might be pointed out that The Indian Army stormed the Golden Temple on the night of 5 June under the command of Maj. Gen. Kuldip Singh Brar who was a Sikh himself. I am not saying that the Jalianwala Bagh Massacre is same as Operation Blue Star. However, the essence is the same; once you get an order in the army you follow it without question.

These people fail to understand that army men and woman are bound by something called discipline without which India would have disintegrated long ago. If it was not for the brave soldiers obeying orders, India would never have become the consolidated “India” as we know today.

The Foreigners

This same school of thought that calls our brave soldiers “mercenaries”, call us foreigners. Their logic is that while British captured rest of the geographical area that we today know as India, they could never capture Nepal, thus all the people who are of ethnically Nepali background are foreigners and do not have the same claim to India as those who were subdued by the British.

What these people fail to see and understand is that, people of Ethnically Nepali origin were living in Darjeeling before the British took over the piece of land that today is known as the Darjeeling hills, Terai and Duars. When we use the term Gorkhali in Indian context, it consists of people of Nepali, Sikkimeese, Bhutanese, Lepcha and people belonging to other Indo-Burman, Indo-Mongolic stock. These mixed stocks of people have an identity different from that of people from where they ethnically originated. Thus, to call Gorkhalis “foreigner,” not only shows gross misinterpretation of facts, but also shows ignorance and deliberate attempt to misread the history of the region.

It is to be understood that India as a consolidated nation was formed after 15th of August 1947, and there have been migration and immigration of people from various regions across India to various other regions: before, during and after the independence of our country. And each and every community has contributed to the formation of our great nation India in their own special way. What I fail to see is the fact that, even after 62 years of Independence, we the Gorkhalis are still considered foreigners by the so called “intelligentsia” based in Siliguri.

The Martyrs

As I have written before in this same column [An Ungrateful Nation], the contributions of Gorkhalis towards our nation building are immense. I would like to share a section of mail sent to me by my uncle [kaka] who retired as a JCO from 5/11 Gorkha Rifles, he sent us recently as an example….

“In earlier days, say immediately after independence, in 1948 Pak Muzzahudins had attacked Kashmir. At that time 5/11 GR was engaged to defend/ drive out the attackers from dominating features in Pir Panjal Range. They were air lifted from Eastern Sector (Assam) armed with bolt action 303 rifles. And they were able to not just resist the Muzzahudin onslaughts, but also sent back the Muzzahudins to where they came from.

In Kargil Sector all the dominating features were manned by Pak troops till 04 Dec 1971. They were in the habit of harassing Indian side by firing from Howitzer Guns, Mortars etc, whenever there were any larger concentration/ movement of vehicles along Srinagar – Leh Highway, thus damaging good amount of property including fatal cases. During 1971 Indo-Pak Conflict 2/11 GR was engaged to capture Pt 13620 and adjacent well fortified posts such as 11 Post, 12 Post (New Post), Black Rock, Brown Hills etc in the eastern side of River Shango and 5/3 GR (which was ordered to move to Kargil from Kiary, near Leh) to capture Hathi Matha, Bulbul and adjacent Posts in the western side of the river. The operation was successful in which Col R.B. Gurung, Maj Vetri Nathan (Posthumously) & Hav Phurba Lepcha ex 2/11 GR were awarded Vir Chakra among Sena Medals to others. There were 10/12 Battle Casualties (Supreme Sacrifices) reported from 2/11 GR in the whole operation. After cease fire we find ourselves constructing bunkers two more ridges beyond Pt 13620, thus giving permanent sigh of relief to the populace of Kargil Bazar and surrounding villages. In 1965, I heard a whole Brigade [not Gorkhali] was employed to capture the said dominating feature which was tactically very important but no success came to hand. Almost all the troops lost their life.

I believe that we have been able to add a good area of land into the Indian frontiers as well as given a permanent solace to the Govt. from frequent harassments and economical loss due to such firings. And, similar success in various sectors by other Gorkha Battalions also. If such areas are added it would be far larger area as compared to that of Gorkhaland. Such are the contributions of the Gorkhas.”

He sent us this mail, recently to remind us why we need to feel offended when some two penny politician wannabe calls our brave soldiers “mercenaries” and us “foreigners”.

There are numerous such stories or bravery and sacrifice, and we are proud of our history, but honestly I strongly feel that we need to move beyond being the sacrificial lambs [No offence to the bravest of the brave martyrs]. Where we the Gorkhalis see pride and honor, others see monetary and economic benefit, where we the Gorkhalis see sacrifice and martyrdom others see mercenary.

India as a nation needs to understand that we have tilled our motherland with our blood and sacrifices and if the land could talk, perhaps she would call us her favorite sons and daughters.

There are many who cite the contribution of their community in Indian freedom struggle, while refusing to acknowledge the contributions of Gorkhali greats such as Saheed Durga Malla, Capt. Ram Singh Thakuri etc.

There are many who cite the past sacrifices and lay claim to the present and the future, while indignantly refusing to acknowledge our current sacrifices and the price of freedom our community has paid time and again.

Perhaps it is time for us to move ahead and write a new destiny for ourselves.

Finally, I leave you all with the lyrics from the song “Ragat” written by Mr. Sudarshan Tamang, “Ragat Bagaune chahana cchaina, Aba bireko bahana hoina… Bathoharu mukhaile ladcchan, Kranti vaye sojha nai marcchan… Bhir vayera panita payau ke, Anshu shivay aru ke… Shanjha ho sansar sabko…feri kina ladai.. Baru malai kayarai bhana, Purkha ko harnai bhana… Hingsha garne chahana cchaina, Manauta ko kina mol cchaina”

Hope! I made some sense

upendra

All hill parties name representatives for Delhi talks, GJMM to decide today, Morcha movement affects hill hydel plants

By Various Sources on September 03,2008

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All hill parties name representatives for Delhi talks, GJMM to decide today

DARJEELING, Sept. 2: All hill parties have declared the names of representatives who would accompany the GJMM leadership for the proposed tripartite meeting on Gorkhaland to New Delhi on 8 September.
The GJMM had announced at the all party meeting yesterday that one representative from each party would accompany the delegation to New Delhi and had requested the parties to submit the names of their representatives by today.
The AIGL general secretary Mr Laxman Pradhan, CPRM central secretariat member Mr JB Rai, Mr GS Yonzon BJP president (Hill unit) and District Congress Committee (Hill) joint secretary Mr Chabi Rai are the ones who would represent their organisations in the New Delhi talks.
GJMM general secretary Mr Roshan Giri informed that his party would announce the names of its representatives tomorrow. n SNS


Meditation classes for Gorkhaland volunteers
OUR CORRESPONDENT – The Telegraph

Kalimpong, Sept. 2: About 400 volunteers of the Gorkhaland Personnel (GLP) underwent a day-long session of mental exercise as part of their training here today.

The programme was conducted in two parts with the first one being devoted to educating the young volunteers on the hazards of HIV/AIDS. The session was conducted by the members of Project Saheyta, an organisation engaged in spreading awareness on AIDS. The second part was a meditation conducted by the experts in the field.

The training programme was organised by Bharatiya Gorkha Bhotpurwa Sainik Morcha, the former servicemen’s wing of the Gorkha Janmukti Morcha, which had also recruited the GLP volunteers from among the thousands of people who had attended recruitment drives that were conducted at various places across the hills and the Dooars.

The president of the Sainik Morcha, Ramesh Alley, said the purpose of organising the exercise was to make the youngsters mentally strong and aware citizens.

“The youth are the future of our society and we want to train them to become better citizens so that they can make meaningful contribution to not just the ongoing movement, but to many other things in later life as well,” said Alley.

The mental exercise was a part of the overall training the volunteers are undergoing. Depending on the feedback of the mental session, similar programmes will be organised for the GLP volunteers from Darjeeling, Mirik and the Dooars in their respective areas, Alley said.

Basant Rai, a young volunteer, said he found the two sessions very helpful.

“The session on HIV/AIDS was very helpful, especially since the disease has become a major problem in the hills. The meditation session was stress-bursting,” he added.”

The women GLP volunteers also attended the programme.


Morcha movement affects hill hydel plants
OUR CORRESPONDENT – The Telegraph

Siliguri, Sept. 2: The Gorkha Janmukti Morcha’s movement for a separate state has stalled work in at least five small hydel projects in the Kalimpong subdivision, officials of the West Bengal Green Energy Development Corporation said today.

The West Bengal Renewable Energy Development Agency had earlier sought expression of interest from private entrepreneurs to set up micro and small hydel projects that would harness streams in the Darjeeling hills and generate anything between 10kw and 6mw of power. The Green Energy Development Corporation was later given charge of the small plants.

“Work has come to a halt in at least five small hydel projects, all in Kalimpong, because of the ongoing movement,” S.P Gon Chaudhuri, the managing director of the Corporation, said over the phone from Calcutta. “We are told that construction at the sites was disrupted which prompted the private investors to keep their activities on hold.”

According to Gon Chaudhuri, three of the small plants will be set up on the Chel river, while the other two will be on the Naxalkhola and the Pedong. “There is, however, no disruption in the four small hydel projects that have already been commissioned. But we are concerned over the sudden disruption in these five plants,” the MD said.

“Given the current state of affairs, we cannot say when the investors will resume construction,” he added.

Although the official refused to disclose details, sources said investors had to encounter problems like absent workers, frequent and long strikes and lack of transport to carry material to the sites.

“Since the Morcha allowed even banks to open only on specific days of the week, the investors found it difficult to disburse wages and make other payments,” one of the sources said.

Kamal Mittal, associated with PCM Hydel Power Corporation Limited, a Siliguri-based company working on a 6mw hydel project on the Chel near Gorubathan in Kalimpong, spoke of other difficulties.

“We have a number of documents lying with some government departments in Darjeeling which need to be processed so that we can go ahead with the construction,” Mittal said. “But as the government offices are virtually closed in Darjeeling (because of the Morcha’s movement), we can do nothing but wait.”

When told about the problems, Binay Tamang, the media and publicity secretary of the Morcha, said: “No diktat has been issued by us on these small hydel projects. They are free to work and we do not have any knowledge of disruption so far. The investors can also meet our central committee leaders if they need any help.”



‘Tourism to get a filip this festive season’
Statesman News Service

SILIGURI, Sept. 2: The state tourism minister, tourism department officials and tour operators sounded expectant of a tourism revival in Darjeeling with the festive season approaching. All expressed the view that a satisfactory formula might come out of the ensuing tripartite dialogue on the Darjeeling tangle and restoration of peace in the Hills would rejuvenate tourism prospects.

The state tourism minister Mr Manab Mukherjee, said that the state government was optimistic of a breakthrough in course of the proposed tripartite dialogue and with peace restored in the Hills it would do everything to boost up the long- flagging tourism prospects in the Hills. “Pujas is imminent and we want to see Darjeeling Hills brimming again with tourists from far and near. We do not want this tourist season to be wasted away like the previous years because of the political turmoil,” he said.
“The state government is pinning hopes on the approaching tripartite dialogue and if a breakthrough is achieved, the state tourism department would step in immediately to boost up the sagging tourism sector in the hills,” the minister said.
Asked whether the state government was contemplating any special incentive for the Hill tourists, the minister said that peace must be restored first and only then the government would be in a position to think of any package.
With apprehension of another tourist season being washed out in the wake of the dragging tension in the Hills the tour operators are also looking forward to the proposed 8 September tripartite dialogue on Gorkhaland. “Something positive must happen during the negotiation, otherwise we would be back to square one. Wasted tourist season year after year would definitely affect the economy of the Hills as well as the plains. The pinch is being felt and all must understand this and work out a solution,” said Mr Raj Basu, whose concern has major stakes in the tourism sector here.
Mr Gopal Lama, the deputy director, West Bengal Tourism, said that with the situation in the Hills promising to look up, his department was taking initiatives to bring things back on the right track. “For instance, several important members of the Conglomerate of Bengal Hotel Owners, the apex body of hotel proprietors in West Bengal, visited Darjeeling last week to take stock of the situation. They have also proffered some corrective measures to boost tourism prospects,” he said.
“The Union tourism and state tourism departments are keeping a close watch on the situation and would do everything to pump fresh impetus in the Darjeeling hills,” Mr Lama said.


Himalayan English School scores a goal…

SILIGURI, Sept. 2: Himalayan English School (HES) won the 6th Brotherhood Football Tournament 2008 beating hosts Lincoln’s High School (LHS) 3-1 via tie-breaker at the LHS Ground here today. The two teams were tied 1-1 after regulation and extra time.

Pramit Chettri of LHS finished as the highest scorer of the meet with seven goals, while Sachin Chettri (HES), Rintu Chaudhury (LHS) and Mithilesh Prasad Sah (LHS) were adjudged the Man of the Match, Most Valuable Player and Best Goal-Keeper of the Meet. The Most Promising Team of the Tournament award went to Auxilium Convent.
Mr Temba Sherpa and Mr Shankar Khati, two senior teachers of HES gave away the prizes, while Mr NN Paul, founder general secretary, LHS and Mr KK Chaudhary, general manager, The Statesman were present at the occasion as the chief guest. Seven teams took part in the meet, which was organised by the Class-XI students of LHS. n SNS



‘Tourism to get a filip this festive season’
Statesman News Service
SILIGURI, Sept. 2: The state tourism minister, tourism department officials and tour operators sounded expectant of a tourism revival in Darjeeling with the festive season approaching. All expressed the view that a satisfactory formula might come out of the ensuing tripartite dialogue on the Darjeeling tangle and restoration of peace in the Hills would rejuvenate tourism prospects.
The state tourism minister Mr Manab Mukherjee, said that the state government was optimistic of a breakthrough in course of the proposed tripartite dialogue and with peace restored in the Hills it would do everything to boost up the long- flagging tourism prospects in the Hills. “Pujas is imminent and we want to see Darjeeling Hills brimming again with tourists from far and near. We do not want this tourist season to be wasted away like the previous years because of the political turmoil,” he said.
“The state government is pinning hopes on the approaching tripartite dialogue and if a breakthrough is achieved, the state tourism department would step in immediately to boost up the sagging tourism sector in the hills,” the minister said.
Asked whether the state government was contemplating any special incentive for the Hill tourists, the minister said that peace must be restored first and only then the government would be in a position to think of any package.
With apprehension of another tourist season being washed out in the wake of the dragging tension in the Hills the tour operators are also looking forward to the proposed 8 September tripartite dialogue on Gorkhaland. “Something positive must happen during the negotiation, otherwise we would be back to square one. Wasted tourist season year after year would definitely affect the economy of the Hills as well as the plains. The pinch is being felt and all must understand this and work out a solution,” said Mr Raj Basu, whose concern has major stakes in the tourism sector here.
Mr Gopal Lama, the deputy director, West Bengal Tourism, said that with the situation in the Hills promising to look up, his department was taking initiatives to bring things back on the right track. “For instance, several important members of the Conglomerate of Bengal Hotel Owners, the apex body of hotel proprietors in West Bengal, visited Darjeeling last week to take stock of the situation. They have also proffered some corrective measures to boost tourism prospects,” he said.
“The Union tourism and state tourism departments are keeping a close watch on the situation and would do everything to pump fresh impetus in the Darjeeling hills,” Mr Lama said.



Ethnic Gorkha students demand autonomy
NewsTrack

Kolkata, Sep 2 (ANI): Student activists of ethnic Gorkha community held a march here to demand a separate state of “Gorkhaland” be carved out of West Bengal.

 
Around 500 youths of the Gorkha Janamukti Morcha (GJM) joined the rally.
 
GJM’s students’ wing, Gorkha Janamukti Vidyarthi Morcha (GJVM) said the march was part of their agitation in the struggle for a separate homeland.   

“We have come here for our very old demand of Gorkhaland,” said Kismat Chettri, president of GJVM.
 
Students from Darjeeling, Kurseong, Kalimpong and Dooars parts of the state sporting T-shirts with “We Want Gorkhaland” inscribed on them, participated in the rally.
 
“We are here, taking too much trouble because we all are deprived, that’s why we are here. We just want our right and justice,” said Neelima Chettri, a student of St. Joseph’s School, Darjeeling.
 
The GJM, comprising about half a dozen parties, has been organising protests over the past few months in the Darjeeling Hills, over a demand for a separate Gorkhaland state.
 
The West Bengal Government, however, has been resisting the demand.
 
The Gorkha population in West Bengal is around one million out of 80 million people, although the overwhelming majority is concentrated in Darjeeling. (ANI)
 

THE NEVER-ENDING WAIT FOR A HOMELAND

 By Dr. Sonam B Wangyal
The following is a chronicle of the long and enduring struggle of a peoples’ movement for a separate homeland for over a hundred years. It is not a testament to ridicule or chastise our Bengali counterparts but simply to let them understand the sense of helpless predicament that a minority community suffers under the weight of an overwhelming majority population, the helplessness under the dark cloud of political chauvinism, and the helplessness in suffering financial nepotism. This is also a testament to illustrate many states in India have had the good sense to agree to a partition(s) without feeling a loss of prestige even when there was a possibility of another bifurcation. Assam has been split more times than Bengal can even dread of, and it is still alive and kicking, despite the threat of even more partitions. Consider the strong and proud martial state of Punjab which was partitioned into Punjab and Haryana, it was further partitioned with the formation of Himachal Pradesh and a third partition created Chhandigarh. Punjab still survives not humiliated, not politically weakened and not financially at any great loss. The partitioning of Madhya Pradesh created Chhattisgarh; Andhra Pradesh was a result of the partition of Madras (Tamil Nadu), and Jharkhand was a result of partition of Bihar. New states have been created but the partition or the process and the subsequent evolvements have never reduced the prestige and the standing of the ‘mother’ states. Examples abound and my prayer is that Bengal politicians should draw lessons form history. I am absolutely confident that a Bengali will be at home in Gorkhaland as a Gorkha will be in Bengal as has been for a Sardar in Haryana or a Jat in Punjab. The exercise is basically to give an identity to a community, race or language, in the form of a separate homeland. I seriously empathized with one of my good friend, a Bengali from Cachar in Assam, who used to feel isolated, violated and insulted, for his community was an absolute minority with Cachar and its Bengali population like an island surrounded by non-Bengalis. I would request my Bengali friends to co-relate the plight of the Cachar Bengalis in Assam to the dilemma of the Gorkhas and tribal people in West Bengal and then fashion one’s opinion. One is naturally inclined to believe, and even entirely agree, that Bengal has always been above fair and square with the hills but the present Chief Minister himself is on record commenting that enough had not been done, a statement that comes after 61 years of independence of India and 73 years after the creation of Bengal Legislative Assembly. It is therefore not surprising that numerous Bengali intellectuals are openly espousing Gorkhaland and that is so because history is their testimony, not misplaced sentiment, undue pride or jingoistic political fuss. Of course some confrontational groups of Bengalis and a few politicians do share a different opinion, and the former has over-reacted occasionally and the latter harps on non-acceptance of another partition, but in the end history and reality have to be respected, agreed upon and accepted. No where in India has a community ever had such a profound and protracted struggle like the toil, effort and endeavour for a homeland and I for one believe that an amicable separation is any day better than a rancorous and a bitter divorce. The story of a struggle for a creation of a separate homeland unfolds in 1907, in the last century, and even continues to the present one. As a non-political observer I find it amazing that despite the Bengali politicians generally being highly cultured, refined, well-educated and staunch believers in human dignity and rights to self determination feels no embarrassment in retaining Darjeeling and the Dooars as parts of West Bengal.    
 
1907: The FIRST DEMAND for a Separate Homeland: Following the division of Bengal the Darjeeling district was put under Bhagalpur Division in Bihar. This did not solve the problem for us because even in Bihar we were still a wretched minority. The very act of shunting the district from one division to another became a proof that the British did not quite know where to place the district. This must have stirred into an awakening amongst the educated people in the district on the feeling that their hills were doomed to exist as a minority through attachment to a bigger state in the plains. Whether Darjeeling was thrown into Bihar or Bengal the hillmen would be an ineffective minority amongst the teeming millions of plainsmen. Furthermore, educationally or financially the hillmen were no match against the plainsmen who had established colleges, universities and commercial industries. Then came the news of the Morley-Minto Reforms (1909)[1] which promised constitutional changes and some voice to the Indians in deciding public matters. This must have appeared like a small light at the end of the tunnel and so two years before (1907) the actual reforms came into practice the “leaders of the Hill people” submitted to the government a joint petition on behalf of the Bhutias, Lepchas, and Nepalis demanding a “separate administrative set-up” outside the influence of Bengal. At that period of time, most of the new states that have come up in the past decade or two, had not even been conceptualized, let alone demanded or struggled for.
 
Nothing materialized out of the 1907 petition and it could be called a failure except for the fact that it was for the first time the three major communities had come under one umbrella, united for a common cause, to seek a homeland of their own. Despite the government’s indifference the year in history did not draw a total blank for Kurseong and Siliguri obtained municipality status in that year.
 
1917: The SECOND DEMAND for a Separate Homeland
After a gap of ten years on 5th December, 1917, The Hillmen’s Association petitioned Edwin Montague, the Secretary of State for India that “Darjeeling’s inclusion in Bengal was comparatively recent and only because the British were rulers common to both places. …Historically, culturally, ethnically, socially, religiously, linguistically there was no affinity whatsoever between Bengal and Darjeeling.” The petition further stated that, “In laying down the plans for the future, the Government should aim at the creation of a separate unit comprising of the present Darjeeling District with the portion of Jalpaiguri District which was annexed from Bhutan in 1865.”[2] This would translate as Darjeeling and the Dooars and it was the first demarcation of the homeland in the minds of our forefathers as far back as 1917. It is of no surprise that the Prant Parishad, Gorkha National Liberation Front and the Gorkha Jana Mukti Morcha sought or seek nothing more than that. The petition also proposed the formation of North East Frontier Province (cf. North West Frontier Province) which would include Darjeeling District, Dooars, Assam and NEFA (Arunachal Pradesh). Signatories were S.W. Laden La, Dr. Yensingh Sitling, Khardgabahadur Gurung, Meghbir Singh, Lachman Singh, Narprasad Kumai, and Deonidhi Upadhaya.    
 
1920: The THIRD DEMAND for a Separate Homeland:
The Hillmen’s Association once again appealed to Edwin Montague on 11 February 1920. The Ninth Dispatch on Indian Constitutional Reforms had placed the district as a “Backward Tract” but the Association rejected this label as derogatory and also as a camouflage to keep the Hills under Bengal. The Memorial stated, “It appears to us that our case has been somewhat obscured  by including the dispatch under “Backward Tracts” and our prayer for separation from Bengal has been misunderstood…We respectfully ask that at the present time, when the question of our political future is being determined, we should be granted the recognized rights of self-determination. We do not wish to be dominated by the people of the plains. We are sure that if we were, we would be swamped by the millions of Bengal and our own people would not get their rightful place in the Government of their own country. …Moreover, if our original proposal be adopted, viz., that the portion of the Jalpaiguri District which (along with the Kalimpong Sub-Division) was annexed from Bhutan in 1865, should be excluded from Jalpaiguri and included in our unit, then, we should have a population about as large as that of New Zealand.  
 
1920: The FOURTH DEMAND for a Separate Homeland
In 1920 something strange and unexpected occurred. The Darjeeling Planters’ Association and the European Association of Darjeeling along with the Hillmen’s Association petitioned the government to create an “Excluded Area” comprising of Darjeeling District and the Dooars. Of interest here is that the first two associations’ memberships consisted entirely of Europeans and it becomes apparent that even they felt their interests threatened under the increasing power of native Bengali administrators. The Europeans had huge investments in tea, real estate and hotels and they calculated they would be better protected if the area was administratively detached from Bengal. It is not any great task to imagine the fear and insecurity the hillmen must have endured considering that even the members of the ruling race were worried scared of a continued existence under Bengal. Because of this one joint petition with the British subjects very occasionally some mischievous people try to subject all other later petitions as being influenced by the Darjeeling resident British people. The British were never admitted to any of the hill organizations and they were never taken into confidence nor sought out for guidance or advice, never.  N.B. Statehood for Chattishgarh was first mooted in this year by Rangpur Congress Unit, Thirteen years junior to our demand. The agitation for a state commenced only in the mid-1960s and the first united all party movement came about only in 1990 under Chattishgarh Raj Nirman Manch. In 2000 a new state was born. They were chronologically years behind us but they passed us by because in 1990 All Parties came together including the Congress and the BJP in a bid to create a new state. Maybe there is an important lesson here for our leaders: Chhutay-ra chhuttai rajya paonu garo chha, ektamai hamro jeet chha. A year later in 1921 Thakur Chandansingh (Dehra Doon) formed the Gorkha League,[3] predominantly consisting of retired Gorkha soldiers. In 1921 Mahatma Gandhi launched the Non-cooperation Movement in which Dalbahadur Giri from Darjeeling and Chhabilal Upadhaya from Assam contributed appreciatively.
 
1929: The FIFTH DEMAND for a Separate Homeland

The Hillmen’s Association’s demand of 1917 was reiterated once more when Simon Commission visited India in 1929.[4] This was the year that the First memorandum for a Jharkhand state was placed, junior to our demand by 22 years. In 1947 the All India Jharkhand Party was formed followed by Sonat Santhal Samaj under Shibu Soren in 1969, both junior to out All India Gorkha League by 4 and 26 years respectively. Nothing much happened till when the Maoist Communist Centre once more reiterated the demand in 1971. By this time we had already petitioned the government 18 times. In 1972 Soren formed the Jharkhand Mukti Morcha and coincidentally we too have a Mukti Morcha. Jharkhand Area Autonomous Council was conceded to in 1995 but even this was junior to our autonomous Hill Council by 7 years. AND yet Jharkhand became a state in 2000 and we are still languishing even today. If Jharkhand’s famous wicket-keeping son M.S. Dhoni had been born in our hills he would have surely questioned “How’s that?” Yes, how is that possible?
 
1930: The SIXTH DEMAND for a Separate Homeland

On 25th October 1930 the “Gorkhas settled and domiciled in India” placed before the government a demand for homeland stating, “Darjeeling, where the Gorkha population predominate, should be excluded from Bengal and treated as an independent administrative unit, with the Deputy Commissioner as the Administrator, vested with much more powers than that of a District Magistrate, and assisted by a small Executive Council, representative of all the interests in the administration of the area.”[5] Signatories: Rai Saheb H.P. Pradhan (President, Hillmen’s Association, Kalimpong), Lt. Gobardhan Gurung (President, Gorkha Army Officers’ Association), P.M. Sundas (Secretary, Gorkha Library, Kurseong), N.B. Gurung (Secretary, Hillmen’s Association, Kalimpong) and P.P. Pradhan (Secretary, Hillmens Association, Darjeeling).
 
1934: The SEVENTH DEMAND for a Separate Homeland
The Hillmen’s Association had pleaded for a separate homeland five times and each time the government had failed to respond positively. So on 6th August 1934 the Hillmen’s Association once more submitted a memorial to Sir Samuel Hoare, Secretary of State for India which stated: “No consideration had been given to the hill peoples” (this is in reference to the previous appeals) “…whereas all minority communities in India had received due consideration of their claims …your memorialists emphatically urge that the District of Darjeeling should be totally excluded from Bengal by the creation of an Independent Administrative Unit with an Administrator the Head of the Area assisted by an Executive Council … the area should be placed directly under the Central Government, the Governor of Bengal acting as the Agent to the Governor-General.”[6] The signatories to the memorial were S.W. Laden La, Lt. Gobardhan Gurung, and Madan Thapa.
 
1935: The EIGHTH DEMAND for a Separate Homeland
Rupnarayan Sinha appealed to The Bengal Government in 1935, on behalf of the Hillmen’s Association, and opposed the 1915 Act, as did almost every responsible Indian. But Sinha went a step further and he even added a demand for the creation of to a Separate Homeland.
 
1937: The NINTH DEMAND for a Separate Homeland
Rai Saheb Hari Prasad Pradhan, the former President of the Hillmens Association (Kalimpong Unit), indirectly appealed to the government that the hills should be separated from Bengal.[7] “The Hill people as a minority in the Province under the new Constitution have not failed to realize the drawbacks and disadvantages of the present arrangement and they are now apprehensive that their social solidarity and their existence as a community is being threatened with serious disruption owing to various factors coming into play chiefly by the realization by many of them that the hill people’s welfare is now dependent on the exigencies to party politics in the Bengal Assembly and their utter helplessness to make their voice heard.” How very prophetic!  
 
1941: The TENTH DEMAND for a Separate Homeland
There are some people who claim that up till now the hill people had only resorted to petitioning, or paper pushing, and the absence of any aggressive move had stalled the creation of a homeland. The opposite opinion is that there were no political parties till then and in the absence of any political organization the best that could be done was to place repeated petitions before the government. When the 1940s came the emergence of political parties also became a reality and the disintegration of the Hillmen’s Association became imminent. The Association made its last appeal in 1941 with a petition to Lord Pethik Lawrence, Secretary of State for India, for a creation of a separate Chief Commissioner’s Province.
Two years later, 1943, the All India Gorkha League was formed by Dambarsingh Gurung. The Darjeeling unit of the Communist Party of India was also formed in the same year and surprisingly these communists also became members of the AIGL.
 
1944: The ELEVENTH DEMAND for a Separate Homeland
There is a little known story of the next plea for a homeland and this was not addressed to the British government, despite India not having attained independence then. In Bhagirath Rawat’s Matoko Maya, 1982, page 32, we learn that when Mahatma Gandhi and M.M. Jinah came to Darjeeling, a deputation had met them and had demanded that the hills be separately treated else the hillmen would suffer in the fields of security and development. It appears that our forefathers had the common sense to realize who the next masters were going to be. The approach was correct but as in the previous cases the response was nothing short of indifference. In the following year (1945) the communists dissociated themselves from the AIGL. In this year the AIGL mouthpiece, a periodical called Gorkha mooted the idea of ‘Gorkhastan’ (Year 1, issue 12).
 
1947: The TWELFTH DEMAND for a Separate Homeland

In 1947 India was to become an independent nation but the hill people were far from being locally independent. In this year of our national independence the Communist Party of India (Darjeeling District Committee) made one of the most preposterous demands ever made by Communists. The Communist Party of India (Darjeeling District Committee) tendered a Memorandum to the Constituent Assembly (6 April 1947), addressed to Pandit Jawaharlal Nehru (Vice-President of the Interim Government of India) and Liaquat Ali Khan (Finance Minister of the Interim Government of India and leader of Muslim League). The memorandum stated: “The Communist Party of India…demand, after making necessary revisions of the existing boundaries, the three contiguous areas of Darjeeling District, Southern Sikkim, and Nepal be formed into one single zone to be called ‘GORKHASTAN’.” Since Gorkhastan is not designated as a country it would technically fall under India. It sounds all very well but not when it comes out of the mouths of die-hard communists. The thought of robbing Sikkim of all its fertile lands and fleecing Nepal of its sovereignty is quite incomprehensible. The whole idea reeks of colonialism. Had the brainstorm come from capitalists, imperialists, and the bourgeois beasts it would have been understandable but what is even more surprising is that not a single enlightened communist criticized the memorandum. Whatever be the merit or demerit of the demand one can safely say that this was another demand for a separate homelamd. This was a period when the All India Gorkha League could have also voiced a demand for a separate homeland and with its huge following, possibly also uniting with the Communists, a strong point could have been made. It is unfortunate that the AIGL leadership was too busy with lesser causes to have a vision of the greater goal.
Even in those days the politicians had their own axe to grind but our litterateurs also proved to be no less and they commenced the verbal war of Gorkha versus Nepali. After decades it has settled to the language being designated Nepali and the community as Gorkha.
 
1948: The THIRTEENTH DEMAND for a Separate Homeland (1948)
After the death of Dambar Singh Gurung a shift in the thinking of the AIGL could be noticed. The new President of the All India Gorkha League, Nar Bahadur Gurung, wrote to the Prime Minister Pandit Nehru proposing three alternatives in regard to a separate homeland:
 

1.                A Separate Administrative Unit under the Central Government.
2.                A Separate Province comprising of Darjeeling district and neighbouring areas.
3.                The district of Darjeeling with the Dooars be included in Assam

 
In this year the Territory of North East Frontier Agency (later Arunachal Pradesh) was formed and was placed under the administration of the Union Government. In 1972 it was declared a Union Territory and on February 20, 1987, it became a full-fledged state. It did not require dozens of petitions, years of peaceful struggle, violent agitation or a no non-cooperation movement for this to materialize. In this same year (15 April) Himachal Pradesh was declared a Centrally Administered territory and despite the State Reorganization Committee’s strong recommendation that Himachal Pradesh be merged with Punjab it still became a new state on 25 January 1971.
 
1949: The FOURTEENTH DEMAND for a Separate Homeland
The Deputy Foreign Minister while on a visit to Sikkim was met by a delegation of the All India Gorkha League and a demand replacing the above one was made where a state consisting of the district of Darjeeling, Jalpaiguri, Sikkim and Cooch Behar was suggested.
 
Post our independence the creation of a separate homeland became virtually impossible for amongst the policy makers was the tough man Sardar Vallabhbhai Patel, the first Deputy Prime Minister, who held very strong and racial views against us and our likes. His letter to Pandit Nehru, dated 7th July 1950 is quite unbelievable and racially slurred:
 
“All along the Himalayas in the north and northeast, we have on our side of the frontier, a population ethnologically and culturally different from Tibetans or Mongoloids. The undefined state of the frontier and existence on our side of a population with its affinities to Tibetans or Chinese have all the elements of potential trouble between China and ourselves…
Let us consider the political conditions on this potential troublesome frontier. Our northern or northeastern approaches consists of Nepal, Sikkim, Darjeeling and the Tribal areas of Assam. …The contact of these areas with us, is by no means, close and intimate. The people inhabiting these portions have no established loyalty or devotion to India. Even Darjeeling and Kalimpong areas are not free from pro-Mongoloid prejudices.” (Emphasis added)
 
Can any leader say the same today?
 
1949: The FIFTEENTH DEMAND for a Separate Homeland
With the misguided and prejudiced opinion of the second most powerful man in the nation what hopes could be entertained for a separate homeland! It is reasonable to presume a bit of that evil legacy still lingers on in Kolkata and New Delhi. Anyway, unknown of the above letter and the distrust nursed in the highest quarters of the country our ancestors kept on appealing and a fresh petition was submitted to the one person who would have never agreed to the demand, Sardar Vallabhbhai Patel.
On 30th October 1949 various leaders of Darjeeling, Sikkim, Jalpaiguri and Cooch Behar met in Darjeeling and formed a bloc known as Uttar Khand Pradesh Sangh. This Sangh submitted a petition to Sardar Vallabhai Patel, pleading for the creation of a new state comprising of Darjeeling district, Sikkim, Jalpaiguri, Cooch Behar and Goalpara of Assam. With Sardar Vallabhbhai Patel firmly entrenched in Delhi what could be a better example of barking up the wrong tree. As expected, Sardar Patel opposed this demand tooth and nail and the movement lost its wind un the face of such a strong opposition.
 
1949: The SIXTEENTH DEMAND for a Separate Homeland
Towards the end of the October of 1949 Dr. B.V. Keskar, the Deputy Foreign Minister, was in Sikkim, and the All India Gorkha League suggested that in an laternative to an earlier proposal to join Darjeeling to Assam a separate Province could be created with the District of Darjeeling, Jalpaiguri, Sikkim and Cooch Behar.
 
1952: The SEVENTEENTH DEMAND for a Separate Homeland
Prime Minister Pandit Nehru came to Darjeeling in 1952 and when he was in Kalimpong to visit the famous Dr. Graham’s Homes he was presented with an appeal by the All India Gorkha League seeking the formation of a North East Frontier Province.  Note: 1952 was the year when the FIRST demand for a statehood came up for Uttaranchal, a late starter by 45 years, we were already on our sixteenth demand for our own state. The first practical political party in the proposed Uttarkhand (Uttaranchal) came up only in 1979 (Uttarkhand Kranti Dal), 36 years younger to AIGL, and yet it was awarded statehood in 2000. In less than 50 years it became a state (the Congress and BJP gave support with the latter asking a name change to Uttaranchal) and Gorkhaland with a history of over a hundred years is yet to see the end of the tunnel.  Sardar Patel was no more around to scuttle the proposal, so where did we go wrong?  
 
1955: The EIGHTEENTH DEMAND for a Separate Homeland
In 1953, 11 districts of Madras State were joined to form Andhra Pradesh. Two years later in 1955 the hills were fortunate to have the Chairman of the State Reorganization Committee on a visit to Darjeeling.  The District Shramik Sangh submitted to him a memorandum where the President of the Sangh, Shri Daulatdas Bokhim stated that, “The Kochayas, Meches, Lepchas, Bhutias, Nepalis and Rajbanshis are the original inhabitants of this district whose customs,systems and traditions fundamentally differ from that of the rest of West Bengal. …I put forward this profound demand of the creation of a part ‘C’ State of North Bengal inclusive of Darjeeling, Jalpaiguri, Cooch Behar districts…” The final outcome, a year later, was negative for the hills but for Andhra Pradesh the SRC recommended the addition of 9 districts of the former Nizam’s dominions and it was made a full-fledged state with Hyderbad as the capital. Madhya Pradesh also came into existence in the same year.
 
1955: The NINETEENTH DEMAND for a Separate Homeland
It might be added here that up till now petitions/demands were put up by single organization or a single political party. In 1855 a more united forum placed an appeal before the State Reorganization Committee on behalf of the All Committee District Organization. The Secretary, Shri S.B. Ghosh, defined the areas of the new state to include Darjeeling district, Sikkim, Jalpaiguri and Cooch Behar.
 
1980: The TWENTIETH DEMAND for a Separate Homeland
There is a period of relative inactivity as far as the demand for a state is concerned. It was a period when the All India Gorkha League dominated hill politics and the party was virtually an instrument of Deo Prakash Rai’s calls. Furthermore, the agitation for the recognition of the Nepali language seems to have sapped some of the energy and interest. There were also attention-diverting offers or suggestions like Autonomous Area, Regional Autonomy, Autonomous Administrative Set-Up etc.   But while all these were going on Nagaland became a state in 1961 and Meghalaya in 1972. In the background there were regrouping of forces and about the most active was the Prant Morcha (previously Prantiya Sanstha and in future Prant Parishad). Having garnered good support amongst the people it telegrammed the Prime Minister, Mrs. Indira Gandhi: “Our long felt demand for a separate State Gorkhaland be carved out as soon as possible. Separate State only solution. We welcome our people from Assam to our own State Gorkhaland but not to be deported in other States. Gorkhaland always salutes to the national and your leadership.” Dated 23 April 1980.  
 
1981: The TWENTY-FIRST DEMAND for a Separate Homeland
Now not to be outdone, the AIGL suddenly revived its old demand after a hibernation of 29 long years. The All India Gorkha League stated to Shri Zail Singh, Home Minister, during his visit to Darjeeling, that it “is very much relevant in our demand to get a Separate Statehood outside West Bengal to ensure administrative efficiency and convenience and coordination of economic development and welfare activities for this region.” This memorandum also included the causes leading to the increasing law and order problems, deforestation, neglected development and the need to include Nepali language in the 8th Schedule of the Constitution.
 
1982: The TWENTY-SECOND DEMAND for a Separate Homeland
By the time the 1980s were ushered in Prant Parishad was losing its appeal to the Gorkha National Liberation Front and eventually when the latter got the upper hand the Prant Parishad leaders were slighted, abused and threatened. Despite winds of popular support blowing in GNLF’s direction the President of the Prant Parishad, Shri Indrabahadur Rai, wrote to the Home Minister Shri Zail Singh, demanding a full fledged state: “We demand the formation of the State of Darjeeling comprising of the Nepali speaking regions North Bengal i.e., the Nepali speaking areas of the Darjeeling and Jalpaiguri districts.
…The Darjeeling Prant Parishad is of the opinion that nothing short of full-fledged statehood for Darjeeling and no other administrative scheme will ultimately found to be workable.” Dated 4the January 1982. Thus the 21st demand came to a close and soon Prant Parishad too was to become a closed chapter in the history of a search for a eparate homeland.
 
1986: The TWENTY-THIRD DEMAND for a Separate Homeland
A widespread allegation was circulating in West Bengal, and not without truth, that the movement led by the GNLF had only hearts but no brains, since Subhash Ghising refused to take assistance of intellectuals and professionals. At this juncture, the more cerebral gentry of Darjeeling, calling themselves “educated and the professional hill people” petitioned the Prime Minister, Shri Rajiv Gandhi.  These concerned people had come together as “Study Forum” and had such eminent people like Advocate B.K. Pradhan, Advocate Bal Dewan, Advocate Uttam Pradhan, Advocate D.K. Pradhan, Publisher-Printer Uday Mani Pradhan, MBA, Dr. Pinto C. Lama, Prof. Amar Rai, Prof. L.B. Rai, Prof. T.B. Chhetri, Sanitation expert Shri Gagan Gurung, internationally acclaimed bakery owner Shri J.B. Edwards, including social workers and luminaries like Shri Enos Das Pradhan, Shri Lee Pradhan, Shri L.B. Rai, Shri Ratan Mothey,  and Shri Deep Waiba. Their petition of 31st August 1986 is a long document but just one paragraph will be quoted which more or less sums up the whole: “The demand is an expression of the belief in the best democratic tradition that the right to a state within the Indian Union is an inalienable right. It is therefore not a matter of acceding to the demand condescendingly but giving what is rightfully ours.” This petition slightly blunted the allegations mentioned above but I have a strong feeling that the intelligentsia was doing this more for the love of the land than any respect or affection for the leader, Subhash Ghising. By now the hills were gripped with violence. For 85 years the hillmen had tolerantly accepted one rejection after another. The highlanders had endured police firing at Rohini Tea Garden (1949), another firing at Magaret’s Hope Tea Estate (1955), evictions at Rangli-Rangliot Tea Estate, and even the uncalled for killing of 6 people at Kurseong on 25th May 1986. Patience and tolerance was stretched taut and it just needed one more needless provocation and matters would come to a head. On 27 July 1986 the whole district took part in burning the Indo-Nepal Treaty of 1950. No one quite sees anything illegal in a simple act as burning of a Treaty but the administration responded by meeting the demonstrators with a hail of bullets in Kalimpong leaving behind 13 dead and about 50 injured. The hills erupted.    
 
1986 The TWENTY-FOURTH DEMAND for a Separate Homeland
I would like to include the entire movement, but more specifically the record-shattering 40 days continuous strike as well as the huge list of martyrs, under the GNLF, as the TWENTY-FOURTH demand for a separate homeland. The importance of the whole exercise is that it now became violence for violence and most of the time it was difficult to point out who initiated the carnage. It proved to West Bengal and to the Centre that the highlanders were capable of extreme violence too. The hillmen claim 1200 of them were martyred and what can be a stronger, a more emphatic demand than hundreds of people sacrificing their lives for a separate homeland.  This demand and movement eventually fell victim to an agreement that resulted in Darjeeling Gorkha Hill Council. Subhas Ghising agreed to ‘drop’ the demand for a homeland. The clarion call from Subhas Ghising had bee “Do or Die” and the final outcome was Ghising dod not ‘do’ and many people did ‘die’. All these years the Central Government and the State Government had disappointed the hills and there was now someone within to disappoint the highlanders. No wonder the West Bengal government always treated Subhas Ghising with velvet gloves.
 
1986: The TWENTY-FIFTH DEMAND for a Separate Homeland
West Bengal Assembly elections had just been completed on 23rd March 1987 and the hills had unanimously registered support for Gorkhaland by sending back empty ballot boxes: 129 empty boxes out of 154 in Darjeeling constituency, 147 empty out of 156 in Kalimpong, 151 empty out of 170 in Kurseong, 151 empty out of 170 in Mirik and even Dooars sent 10 empty ballot boxes. On 13th March 1987 the GNLF wrote to the Home Minister, Shri Buta Singh, that this was as good as a referendum in favour of a state outside West Bengal and demanded “a separate State of Gorkhaland within the framework of the Indian Constitution.” A copy of the demand was also dispatched to the Prime Minister, Shri Rajiv Gandhi. What could have been a more emphatic non-violent protest and demand than this! Nevertheless, the state and the Centre remained unmoved. The question on everyone’s mind was when will a full-scale and no-holds-barred agitation commence since sporadic acts of violence were being reported from different parts of the district.
 
 
The TWENTY-SIXTH DEMAND for a Separate Homeland
The ongoing demand for a separate homeland under the banner of Gorkha Jana Mukti Morcha and the leadership of Shri Bimal Gurung has now become the TWENTY-SIXTH DEMAND for a Separate Homeland. So far it has ducked off any major violent move, despite the occasional provocations, and if this brings about the desired results all the better for us and for West Bengal.
 
The TWENTY-SEVENTH DEMAND for a Separate Homeland

We hope it will not come to this but…
 
 
 
 *****************************************
 
 
[1] The Morley-Minto Reforms of 1909: The most important change in the Morley-Minto Reforms was the provision that qualified Indians would have a greater voice in deciding public questions. Thus one seat in the Governor-General’s Executive Council was reserved for an Indian member (Satyendra Prasanna Sinha, later Lord Sinha of Raipur, was appointed Law Member of the Governor-General’s Council, the first Indian to be so honoured.) The number of members in the Central Legislature was raised from sixteen to sixty and in the Provincial Legislative Councils the number of members was raised to fifty in the major provinces. The non-nominated members were to be elected by groups of local bodies, landholders, trade associations and universities. Darjeeling district and Dooars did not fit into any of these categories.
[2] Before coming to India Edwin Montague had on 20th August 1917 announced in the House of Commons that “…the policy of His Majesty’s Government… is that of the increasing association of Indians in every branch of the administration and the gradual development of self-governing institutions with a view to the progressive realization of responsible government in India…”  The Hillmen’s Association therefore wanted the “self-governing institution”.
[3] Not to be confused with All India Gorkha League formed by Dambarsingh Gurung in Darjeeling.
[4] It was felt that the Reforms of 1919 did not fulfill the aspiration of the Indian nationalists and the demand for legislative began to grow stronger and so under the chairmanship of Sir John Simon was to make a report. His Commission had seven members who were all British and though Indians by and large boycotted the Commission it filed a report announcing “that the natural issue of India’s Constitutional progress…is the attainment of Dominion Status.”
[5] The Report of the Simon Commission was published in May, 1930.
[6] This memorial was presented keeping in mind the Government was to present a White Paper regarding modifications to the Indian Constitution. (The Joint Committee of both Houses of Parliament approved the White Paper and presented its report in October 1934.)
[7] The Act of 1935 proposed Provincial Autonomy. It also created Sind, separating it from Bombay and Orissa Presidencies, Burma was separated from British India and Aden also ceased to be a part of India.   

Three-gun theory in Friday firing death


10 empty cartridges found
VIVEK CHHETRI

Darjeeling, July 29: Preliminary investigations suggest that three different guns were used to fire at Gorkha Janmukti Morcha supporters on Friday, police sources have said.

The volley of bullets that had come raining down, allegedly from the house of GNLF branch committee president Deepak Gurung, had killed Pramila Sharma, a 38-year-old Morcha activist.

“We recovered three types of empty cartridges from Gurung’s residence which clearly suggest that three different weapons were used in the firing,” a police source said. The cartridges are of 9mm, 0.22mm and 0.32mm calibre bullets. So far, 10 empty cartridges have been recovered.

“These were found on the stairs that leads from the second to the third floor,” said the source. Pramila was killed in front of the second floor, the main entrance to Gurung’s house. Since the building is located on a slope, the ground and the first floors that have been let out are below the driveway aligned to Dr Zakir Hussain Road and can be accessed through a side entrance. The GNLF leader and his family occupy the second and third floors of the building.

Eyewitnesses had said the bullets had come in three bursts, suggesting the use of an automatic with 9mm bullets.

It is, however, not yet known which calibre bullet had hit Sharma as the post-mortem report says it had pierced and exited the deceased’s body.

Investigations suggest that there were “five-six” people at Gurung’s house when the firing took place. “We have got some names and are trying to trace them,” said the source.

The police are also worried that the people who were at the GNLF leader’s residence at the time of the firing have fled with the firearms. “That they have escaped is obvious because we have not yet recovered any firearms,” said the source.

Only the second floor of Gurung’s four-storied building had been completely charred after being set on fire by Morcha supporters in the aftermath of the firing. The rest of the floors are intact. Verifications are being conducted to find out the type of arms for which Gurung has a licence. “We know he had a licence, but we want to check out the gun type,” the source said. Civilians are not usually allowed to keep firearms that use 9mm bullets, suggesting that one of the guns used during the firing was probably illegal.

According to the source, the GNLF leader was holed up on the third floor when the mob vandalised the house and set it on fire. “We hid him inside the ground floor toilet. He was later arrested,” said the source. The only other person found in Gurung’s house at that time was 75-year-old Badri Maya Tamang, the caretaker. She, too, was rescued but since she is hard of hearing and suffered a shock, not much details have emerged from her.

Today, the Morcha put up posters across the town warning people that no property should be damaged in town and that those found guilty of it would be dealt with accordingly by the party. The posters come in the wake of attacks on the houses of GNLF leaders after the Friday firing.


8 cartridges recovered from Gurung’s house

DARJEELING, July 29: The police have recovered eight empty cartridges from the third floor of GNLF leader Mr Deepak Gurung’s residence following investigations after the firing that killed GJMM supporter Ms Pramila Sharma on 25 July.

According to the police, the cartridges found indicate that 9mm, .22 and .32 type of firearms had been used. Although the bullet that had struck the victim body and the firearm used in the offence have not been recovered, investigations are on. Mr Gurung, who was arrested from his residence along with 14 others from the GNLF party office at Dr Zakir Hussain Road, are lodged in the Darjeeling correctional home on murder charges. n SNS

GJMM takes over Ghisingh’s house


various sources

DARJEELING, July 29: In the ongoing series of events that followed the violence on 25 July in Darjeeling, GJMM supporters today occupied fallen GNLF leader Mr Subash Ghisingh’s luxurious residence at Manju Tea Estate located around 15 km from Mirik. “Mr Ghisingh’s residence will now be a public property. It will be used as a GJMM office from now on. The residence will also accommodate guests when programmes are held in Mirik,” declared Mr Roshan Thapa, GJMM branch committee president in Manju Tea Estate.

Today’s move follows the 25 July violence in Darjeeling during which, GJMM supporters vandalised Mr Ghisingh’s residence at Dr Zakir Hussain road in Darjeeling town. Once the undisputed king of the Hills, GNLF supremo Mr Subash Ghisingh has had to relinquish power, give up his possessions and flee the Hills with uncertainty hanging over his return ever, all in a span of six months and today he lost his grand white two storied building, which must have cost Mr Ghisingh a fortune to build in a modest place like Manju Tea Estate.

The people in awe of him when Mr Ghisingh enjoyed a next to God image in the Hills will now get a glimpse of the interiors that was shut to outsiders for the past many years. The GNLF chief himself never spent a night at the residence in the past 21 years of his tenure, stopping by only to rest for a few hours. His brother-in-law Mr Kapil Allay who handed over the keys to the GJMM leaders in Mirik today used to look after the house.



REDRAWING THE MAP OF GORKHALAND…….

image

The Indian EXPRESS – Joel Rai
Posted online: Thursday, June 12, 2008 at 2245 hrs

An indefinite bandh in Darjeeling has fixed the focus once again on the issue of Gorkhaland. Joel Rai explains what’s behind the demand for a separate state and how the current demand differs from previous ones

 • There is an indefinite bandh in Darjeeling and tourists have been stranded. What is happening there?

The three hill subdivisions of Darjeeling district—Darjeeling, Kalimpong and Kurseong—have been closed down for an indefinite period by the Gorkha Janmukti Morcha (GJM) as part of their agitation for the formation of a separate state of Gorkhaland. The GJM, formed late in 2007, has revived the demand for Gorkhaland and has been holding protests and rallies in support of a state that is to be carved out of West Bengal.

•What is the Gorkha Janmukti Morcha and who is leading it?

The GJM was formed by Bimal Gurung, earlier a councillor of the Darjeeling Gorkha Hill Council. He was a close associate of Subhas Ghising, president of the Gorkha National Liberation Force (GNLF). The two fell out in 2007 over the attempt to extend 6th Schedule status to Darjeeling. Under the 6th Schedule of the Indian Constitution, certain tribal-majority areas are given autonomy in administration. While the GNLF wanted the 6th Schedule status with enhanced powers for the Hill Council, the GJM desired full statehood. The Centre introduced the 6th Schedule to the Constitution Amendment Bills in Parliament in December 2007 but it was shelved.

•So where is Subhas Ghising and what has happened to the GNLF?

While the GNLF exists as a political organisation, almost its entire support base has moved to the GJM. After a visit to Kolkata in March this year, Ghising was barred from entering Darjeeling by the GJM until he resigned as caretaker administrator of the Hill Council. The term of the last Hill Council expired in 2004, and no elections were held thereafter. The West Bengal Government appointed Ghising as caretaker administrator, extending his term every six months until his resignation in March. Thereafter, Ghising has remained confined to his home in Darjeeling.

•What is behind the demand for Gorkhaland?
 
The demand for a separate administrative set-up for Gorkhas of India was first voiced in 1907, when the premier civil-society body of the Gorkhas, the Hillmen’s Association, asked the British for an administrative set-up separate from Bengal. In 1946, the then undivided Communist Party of India demanded that the Darjeeling areas be constituted in an entity called Gorkhastan. The GNLF took up the issue in a big way from 1986. All these demands considered the ethnic, cultural and linguistic distinctions between the populations of Darjeeling and the rest of West Bengal. Under the West Bengal administration, feel the Gorkhas, Darjeeling has not developed despite being a world-renowned centre for tea, tourism and education.

•What is different from this current demand for Gorkhaland and the one led by the GNLF?

There are two major turns that the current demand for a separate state has taken that distinguishes it from the earlier demand.

First, the map for the current Gorkhaland envisages not only the three hills subdivisions of Darjeeling, Kalimpong and Kurseong, but also Siliguri and parts of the Dooars that fall in Cooch Behar and Jalpaiguri districts in North Bengal, extending up to the River Sunkosh on the border with Bhutan. While the GNLF had included Dooars in its programme, it did not push for their inclusion in their map of Gorkhaland, a result of which was that when the DGHC formed only the hill subdivisions were included in it, leaving out chunks of the plains where large populations of Gorkhas reside. The GJM has managed not only to garner the support of Gorkhas in the plains, but also of the Adivasis, who form a substantial percentage of the population of the Dooars. This has created tensions between the Bengalis of Siliguri and the Gorkhas. The Bengali resistance to Siliguri’s inclusion in the agitation plans of GJM is lead by its local MLA and West Bengal Minister of Municipal Affairs Asok Bhattacharya. The Siliguri Municipality has already passed a resolution that it will fight all attempts to include Siliguri in the proposed state.

Second, unlike earlier, there is an intellectual push to the current demand for Gorkhaland. One of the impetus for a separate state of Gorkhas would be securing of their identity as Indians. Indian Gorkhas have long been misidentified as being citizens of Nepal and they feel that a state of their own will root them to India. The Gorkhaland of their imagination, therefore, does not only secure the economic development of the Darjeeling area but also the political identity of the over one crore Indian Gorkhas across the country.

• So are the Indian Gorkhas migrants from Nepal or where have they come from?

Indian Gorkhas have been residents of India for centuries. Under the Treaty of Sugauli in 1815, Nepal ceded an area of 18,000 sq km to the British. This territory constitutes what are today parts of Himachal Pradesh, Uttarakhand, Sikkim and Darjeeling district. A treaty with Bhutan in 1860 brought the current Dooars areas in Bengal and Assam into British possession. The Gorkha population resident in these territories became part of British India then. The Gorkhas participated in the Freedom Movement with Gandhiji and also joined the Azad Hind Fauj in big numbers. The tune of India’s national anthem Jana Gana Mana was taken from an original composition by Captain Ram Singh Thakur, a Gorkha in the INA. Two Gorkhas, Damber Singh Gurung and Ari Bahadur Gurung were members of the Constituent Assembly. Ari Bahadur Gurung was a member of the drafting committee. He is a signatory to the first Constitution of India.

However, there are two groups of Gorkhas in India, the Indian Gorkhas and those who have come to India under the provisions of the 1950 India-Nepal Treaty of Friendship that allows Nepalese citizens to come and work, buy property and settle in India without permits. Their presence in India has led to confusion about the nationality of Indian Gorkhas and they are often misidentified as Nepalese citizens. A separate state of Gorkhaland, they feel, will help seal their identity as Indians.

•What happens now?

West Bengal CM Buddhadeb Bhattacharjee has said that there will be no official talks with the GJM so long as they continue to demand Gorkhaland. On its part, the GJM says it’s a separate state or nothing. The 1980s agitation saw violence that took a toll of 1,200 lives. Dialogue between the political organisations and the state and Centre looks like the only way out.

THE AWAKENING OF THE SLEEPING GIANT

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Kate Chopin once wrote…. “The years that are gone seem like dreams–if one might go on sleeping and dreaming –but to wake up and find– Oh! Well! Perhaps it is better to wake up after all, even to suffer, rather than to remain a dupe to illusions all one’s life.”… And try as much I may, I can’t better this… in explaining how the sleeping giant – The people of Darjeeling and Doors… have finally awaken from their long slumber.

I once had a chance to discuss Darjeeling with a top-notch CPI (M) leader, and he asked me… “Why do you people always demand a separate state, have we not done enough? We have given you DGHC”. His question and statement showed his outlook and that of his party towards us. They have always thought of us as “the other”, and their approach towards us has always been that of ignorance. They have never really tried to understand our problems and prospects, neither have they tried to take our consents in making decisions that affect us. They have always acted as a bully and on top of it all they seem to wonder why we want a state of our own.

Years of misrule and misguided politics that forced people to suffer insurmountable oppression, tyranny, decadence, indifference and ignorance has in fact helped in people being more resolute, patient and above all united for achieving the common goal – right to self rule, right to determine ones own fate, right to equal opportunity, right to choose, right to say no, right to feel pride in ones language, culture and traditions, right to be oneself, right to be ones own master and above all the right to identity.

One of the most heartening features of people coming together this time is the fact that the people are more involved and passionate than ever before. They are ready to come together as a community and act and speak with one voice. Another very significant aspect of our awakening has been the fact that this time round we have a well thought out plan and guidance of politicians, philosophers, technocrats, bureaucrats and leaders from all over India. However, the cherry in the cake is that finally we have realized the power of being united and demanding our rights non-violently. No doubt the West Bengal government has panicked and has threatened to send in more police and CRPF, but what they fail to realize is that “this time we have done our home work well, and this time around even if you end up buying the leader, the people are not for sale”

Mahatma Gandhi once said “I believe…. that man is the strongest soldier who dares to die unarmed.” This time around we have people who have dared to sacrifice their life and personal happiness and decided to go on hunger strike against the apathy of the powers that be. I specially feel inspired by Mr. Sonam Lama, a simple young man from Munda T. E who has forsaken the choice of getting married to his beloved Rachana Pradhan for the time being and preferred to join the hunger strike, thus putting his love and life on stake for his greater love Gorkhaland… Rachana Pradhan on the other hand is lending all her support and is proud of the fact that her future husband to be is doing so… Hats off to you and numerous others who are suffering for all of us.

There are still people who are reluctant to change, for many of them… change seems to be a painful process that they want to avoid, but what they fail to notice or acknowledge is the fact that… this Darjeeling is not the same any more. It has changed and changed for good. The Darjeeling that I once referred to as the place of the living dead is alive now and it’s dynamic and vibrant and if you refuse to join this moment of change or step aside to allow the change to happen… God Help you… I once again can’t help myself from quoting Bob Dylan… “Come gather ’round people, wherever you roam… And admit that the waters around you have grown… And accept it that soon you’ll be drenched to the bone… If your time to you is worth savin’ Then you better start swimmin’ Or you’ll sink like a stone… For the times they are a-changin’.”

I thank god almighty and I thank those selfless martyrs from our past… for they were the ones who filled our heart with the desire and dream to have a piece of land we could proudly call our own. My salutations to the people who have taken the leadership and have bound people together… and my congratulations to all the brave hearts for awakening and deciding that change is what we need, change is what we want and change we shall have… And nothing is impossible when the sleeping giant has finally awoken… no nothing and that includes Gorkhaland.

Finally, I leave you with immortal lines as spoken by J.F.Kennedy “Those who make peaceful revolution impossible, make violent revolution inevitable”

Hope! I made some sense

Upendra
mr upendra writes from manitoba canada and writes a regular column for the darjeelingtimes.com magazine and the web portal
 
 

Reminiscent of Dafur! Is Darjeeling turning into Dafur?

Photo by Barun Roy

Any takers! Hyundai Santro Skeleton

 

Skeleton of Deepak Gurung’s Hyundai Santro

Photo by Barun Roy

Pictures of Arson in Darjeeling!

 

A car burns and then explodes in Darjeeling

All Photos by Barun Roy

Arson in Kalimpong also!

C. K. Kumai’s house ransacked, motorbike set on fire and car damaged in Kalimpong by agitating mob. Photo by Ajay Agarwal

Darjeeling Hills slips into lawlessness as Administration and Police remain silent spectators

BY BARUN ROY

Too many questions remain unanswered and all attempts to seek answers remain thwarted from all sides. The series of incidents that rocked Darjeeling Hills may be the beginning of things to come and a parley into uncertainty and chaos. The questions to the following questions must be found or else!

 

  1. As Pramila Sharma lay grievously wounded before the entrance to the Director General of Police Official Residence, why didn’t the police guards and officials stationed there not respond? Eyewitness reports suggest that – as a hail of bullets was fired from the window of GNLF Darjeeling Branch President’s house, the compound of the Director General of Police Official Residence was in direct purview of the fire. 
Director Inspector General of Police’s Official Residence overlooking Deepak Gurung’s House

According to eye witness report bullets were fired from this window of Deepak Gurung’s house

Wounded Pramila Sharma being taken to the hospital
A Mother and Son watches in Horror as Pramila Sharma is taken to the hospital after being shot. Pramila’s blood is seen splattered on the mother’s body
  1. According to the statement made by Benoy Tamang, the Press and Publicity Secretary of Gorkha Janmukti Morcha, Deepak Gurung had been harbouring unsocial elements and storing weapons and ammunition. If this was so why hadn’t the law enforcement authorities not investigated into the matter?
A Police contingent strolls leisurely to quell chaos
A Fire Brigade Vehicle stopped at the road by the people
  1.  Eyewitness reports suggest Deepak Gurung and other individuals, possible those who fired from the window of the house was ‘evacuated’ from the house and taken through the compound of the Director General of Police and whisked to unknown locations. If this is so, are Deepak Gurung and the other assailants under arrest? Why hasn’t the District Administration come forward with a statement to the press? 
  2. How is it possible for Deepak Gurung and the assailants to escape while the house being virtually under seize by the people?
  3. The District Administration nor the Police have so far not come out with any statement on the death of Pramila Sharma? Why is there such a delay in the same?
  4. After the death of Pramila Sharma and the subsequent public outburst Deepak Gurung’s House was burnt, vehicles burnt at numerous places, lawlessness and chaos reigned over the streets of Darjeeling for more than 12 hours, why did the Police not react. No arrests were made. As mobs moved around setting fire to vehicles, ransacking houses why did the police not react?
Deepak Gurung’s house set on fire


Burnt Motorbike before Deepak Gurung’s House

People burning Deepak Gurung’s Kashmiri Carpets and Rugs

A car parked before the Youth Hostel burns violently. It turns out later that this car belonged to a GJM supporter.

More cars set on fire before Youth Hostel Darjeeling

Arson at Clubside, Darjeeling

GNLF office furniture burnt at Kurseong by GJM supporters

A Poster in Mirik warning the administration of social strife if Deepak Gurung, A. R. Dewan and Hem Gurung and others were not arrested for the Rockville Shot-out.

Law must prevail by allowing lawlessness to spread, go unchecked and ultimately put an end to it – the Government of West Bengal, District Administration and all parties concerned are guilty of thrusting Darjeeling Hills into the path of Political and social strife. Democracy as such may no longer prevail and for all instruments of Democracy may be not able to function. And as such Darjeeling Hills might fall into chaos. GJM must be careful, for this is what the Government of West Bengal might all the while want to happen in Darjeeling Hills. A few years under Para Military Administration with sweeping power to the District Administration might destroy everyone’s life and lead to indefinite postponement of Civil Rights.