After 41 days of observing a shutdown
interspersed with a few days of respite, the Gorkha Janmukti Morcha
today finally relented and called off its agitation to “honour” the
request made by Union home minister Sushil Kumar Shinde in New Delhi on
September 3.
The GJM’s decision to lift the strike
also came following some degree of influence by constituents of the
Gorkhaland Joint Action Committee of which the Morcha is a member.
The GJAC announced of suspending the
ongoing strike this afternoon following prolonged discussions at the GJM
party office in Singamari.
“We had an elaborate meeting of member
constituents today and we decided to honour the request of the union
home minister and suspend the strike till October 20,” said GJAC
chairman Enos Das Pradhan after the meet in the evening.
The decision was also based on the feedback from the team of former and present legislators who had called on Shinde in Delhi.
“Our decision is based on the assurance
given to our delegation by the central government to arrange a
tripartite soon to study the issues of the Gorkhas living in the
country,” said Pradhan.
However, the GJAC also said it would
meet again on October 19 after observing the attitude of the central
government during the bandh suspension period and chalk out the future
roadmap.
The GJM called an indefinite strike on
July 29 after the central government gave its nod to the creation of a
Telangana state. The following day, GJM president Bimal Gurung resigned
from the post of
Gorkhaland Territorial Administration chief executive to take the statehood movement forward.
The movement was subsequently handed
over to the GJAC, a conglomeration of six political and non-political
bodies, to counter the state government’s retaliation and a high court
order terming the strike as illegal.
The shutdown was then tweaked into a
people’s movement with changes in nomenclature [‘ghar bhitra janta’
(people remaining indoors) and ‘sadak ma janta’ (people outside their
homes)].
The GJAC meeting today also passed a
resolution to file a PIL in the Calcutta High Court against the state
government for violating the July 18, 2011 GTA agreement.
“The state government is violating
clause 29 of the GTA agreement wherein it says all police cases, except
those relating to murder, against GJM leaders and activists would be
withdrawn. The police, on the behest of the state government, have
arrested hundreds of GJM activists and leaders including elected GTA
sabhasads,” said the GJAC chairman.
The number of arrests since July 29 has
so far crossed the 2,000 mark with the detained languishing in various
correctional homes in the Darjeeling hills and Siliguri.
Although the strike has been lifted, the
GJAC said it would continue organising rallies, public meetings and
cultural gatherings in the hills from September 13, the day when all
schools and colleges will reopen.
“We have only suspended the strike and
our agitation will continue in different forms. The cultural gathering
is to apprise the government of the demand of the diverse communities of
the hills and to show we are different from Bengal,” said GJM
spokesperson and Kalimpong MLA Harka Bahadur Chhetri.
The gatherings will be organised every day from 11am to 5pm at Chowrastha in Darjeeling, Mela Ground in Kalimpong, the
Football Ground in Kurseong and near the
Mirik Lake in Mirik where members of various communities will be
dressed in their traditional attire and sport black arm bands as a mark
of protest to the state government’s actions.
“We will wear black arm bands and
protest state government atrocities and express solidarity to those
arrested. We also condemn the imposition of pay cuts of government
employees,” added Chhetri.
Meanwhile, the GJAC, which was working
on an ad-hoc basis since its inception on August 16, will now function
in a full-fledged manner with Bimal Gurung as its president, CPRM
president RB Rai the general secretary and GJAC chairman Pradhan as
chief advisor. The committee has also set up a legal advisory cell and
opened a bank account to receive donations from Gorkhas spread across
the length and breadth of the country.