Ghising's GNLF sets out to renew Units in Darjeeling
DARJEELING: The Gorkha National Liberation Front (GNLF) plans to re-establish its branch committees, which were dissolved around four years ago in the three Hills sub-divisions.
Recently, GNLF chief Subash Ghisingh, in exile in Jalpaiguri, had announced appointment of chief conveners M G Subba, Nima Lama and Maurice Kalikotey for Darjeeling, Kurseong and Kalimpong, respectively. "Within a month, we will form our branch committees in the sub-divisions as per the directive of our party president," Subba said on Thursday.
According to the GNLF Darjeeling convener, Ghisingh has plans to revamp the functioning of party activity in the Hills. "The old politics of going against the own people must be shunned. Time has come for all stakeholders to work together," said Subba. The party will also launch an awareness campaign to garner support for including the Darjeeling Hills under the Sixth Schedule.
"To develop the socio-economic fabric of the Hills, it is imperative that peace and stability is maintained. Fighting against each other will only provide opportunity to vested elements to take advantage," said Subba.
Subhash Ghisingh is "spent force": Gurung
Bimal Gurung called Subash
Ghisingh a “spent force” in the hills, hours after the ousted hill
leader’s party GNLF said it would be revive its branch committees soon. It is not known whether Gurung, who
heads the autonomous GTA Sabha, had knowledge of the GNLF’s decision to
revive its branch committees, which were once powerful bodies in the
hills, but sources in the Gorkha Janmukti Morcha said the party was
watching the GNLF keenly. At a gathering of
the Morcha-affiliated Janmukti Asthai Karmachari Sangathan at the Gorkha
Rangamanch Bhavan, Gurung said: “I get to hear that some people are
trying to organise themselves in various parts of the hills but there is
nothing to worry about.”
He said: “Ghisingh
is a spent force and even his age is against him. Even during the 1986
agitation, 40 per cent of the hill population was with the CPM.... Even
then the CPM could do nothing and at this moment, the GNLF too can do
nothing in the hills.” In the last few
weeks, around 200 Morcha supporters have moved to the GNLF, which has
been inactive in the hills since 2008. The numbers may not worry the
Morcha but the GNLF’s effort to regroup is a cause of some concern. A senior Morcha
leader, on condition of anonymity, said: “Our party president’s speech
is a clear indication that the re-emergence of the GNLF is not a
comfortable situation. The party has to be on the vigil even though we
don’t see the GNLF as an immediate threat.” That the GNLF managed to
muster around 5,000 supporters in Simulbari for its foundation day on
April 5 would not be lost on the Morcha. Gurung today said Ghisingh practised the “politics of lies”.“We are in the
hills now (as a political force). Even though no political person can
claim to last forever, we are not like Ghisingh who would only believe
in the politics of lies. He dropped the demand for Gorkhaland but
continued to say ‘we want Gorkhaland’. The Morcha, has not dropped the
statehood demand,” he said. “You (GNLF supporters) could be practical and move with the times.”
Hours before
Gurung spoke, M.G. Subba, recently appointed the Darjeeling convener of
the GNLF, said the party is ready to revive its branch committees in
Darjeeling, Kalimpong and Kurseong within a fortnight. “Many of our
supporters are coming out in the open. We have decided to revive the
party’s branch committees in Darjeeling, Kalimpong and Kurseong within a
fortnight,” he said here. At the Gorkha
Rangamanch Bhavan, Gurung today lamented the lack of work culture among
GTA employees but also promised to regularise jobs of the 6,000-odd GTA
employees. “If you need work,
I too will demand work from you. In these eight months (of running the
GTA), I have realised that the work culture is extremely poor...,” he
said. “We will soon form a subordinate selection board and we will regularise your jobs.” But administrative
sources said that regularising a 6,000-strong work force would not be
easy as financial sanction for salaries would have to come from the
state.
( Telegraph)
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