Hindustan Times (Bathinda)

Will BJP’s Gorkhaland stand turn into its Achilles’ heel?

- DK Singh letters@hindustant­imes.com

NEW DELHI: The BJP’s one-seat gambit to include the Gorkhaland issue in its 2014 election manifesto to gain an edge in the Darjeeling parliament­ary constituen­cy might come back to haunt the party as it looks to expand its footprint in West Bengal.

The Gorkha Janmukti Morcha (GJM), which has launched a violent agitation in the Darjeeling hills for a separate Gorkhaland state, wants the saffron party to deliver on its promises. “Bengal is just a chowkidar (watchman) of Gorkhaland, and it’s time for its retirement.

The West Bengal assembly will never pass it (resolution for creation of a separate state); the Centre will have to do it on its own. We ensured victory for the BJP (in Darjeeling) in 2009 and 2014. This issue is part of its manifesto too. The BJP government at the Centre must now work towards ensuring it (Gorkhaland),” GJM chief Bimal Gurung told HT.

Gurung sent a delegation of GJM leaders to meet West Bengal BJP chief Dilip Ghosh last week to remind him of the party’s commitment in the manifesto.

He said he raised the statehood issue at a recent NDA meeting, and would now send a delegation to Prime Minister Narendra Modi to demand the implementa­tion of the BJP’s poll promise.

The BJP had initially sought to skirt the Gorkhaland issue in the run-up to the 2014 Lok Sabha elections, making no mention of it in its poll manifesto.

Hours after releasing the document though, it was compelled by the GJM to issue a late night statement, saying, “Further to the election manifesto of the BJP released today… the BJP reiterates that it will sympatheti­cally examine and appropriat­ely consider the long-pending demands of the Gorkhas, the Adivasis and other people of Darjeeling district and the Dooars region.”

With negligible presence in West Bengal, the BJP depended entirely on the GJM’s support to win the Darjeeling Lok Sabha seat.

However, the saffron party has made significan­t gains in the erstwhile Left bastion in the past two years — emerging as the principal challenger to the ruling Trinamool Congress.

As it is, the BJP can ill-afford to be seen as a party supporting the bifurcatio­n of West Bengal even though it has been in favour of smaller states. But those with stakes in Darjeeling are jittery.

In 2012, the GJM had swept the elections for Gorkha Territoria­l administra­tion.

Ahead of elections later this year, he is perceived to be on a slippery wicket, especially after the TMC won civic body polls in GJM stronghold Mirik.

Gurung needed an emotive issue to regain his grip on the region, and chief minister Mamata Banerjee provided it when she announced last month that Bengali would be made a compulsory subject in schools.

Banerjee clarified that Bengali would not be made compulsory at schools in the Darjeeling hills.

However, her retraction came a bit late as the GJM had already mobilised the people on the issue and used it to bring them onto the streets on the statehood issue.

 ?? PTI ?? Security forces try to control women Gorkha Janmukti Morcha supporters during a protest in Darjeeling on Thursday.
PTI Security forces try to control women Gorkha Janmukti Morcha supporters during a protest in Darjeeling on Thursday.

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