Hindustan Times (Delhi)

Bimal Gurung seeks ‘safe passage’ for talks

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HARD BARGAIN GJM wants Centre to guarantee full security for its top leadership for meeting with Centre likely to be held in October

NEWDELHI: Gorkha Janmukti Morcha chief Bimal Gurung wants a safe passage to attend a meeting with the Centre, likely to be held in mid-october, over the Darjeeling impasse.

Gurung is on the run since last month after cases were lodged against him under the Unlawful Activities (Prevention) Act and a lookout notice was issued.

“We want the Centre to guarantee total security for top GJM leaders, including party president Bimal Gurung to attend the meeting to be held on October 16,” said wife Asha Gurung, who heads the women’s wing of the party, over the phone from an undisclose­d location.

Darjeeling was on the edge for 104 days because of a Gjm-sponsored strike over its demand for a separate Gorkhaland state to be carved out of West Bengal’s northern hill districts. The shutdown ended on Tuesday after Union home minister Rajnath Singh announced a meeting to discuss “all issues”.

The GJM is an ally of the BJP- led National Democratic Alliance (NDA). “The GJM will attend the meeting with the single-point agenda of Gorkhaland,” Asha Gurung said.

But her husband will decide on attending the meeting, likely to be held in New Delhi, only if “total security is ensued for the top brass of the party”.

“The hills will burn if Bimal Gurung is arrested and I will take to the streets. The Gorkahland agitation will take a violent turn,” warned Asha Gurung.

Asked if the GJM will accept a fully autonomous set-up instead of the Gorkhaland Territoria­l Administra­tion (GTA) that the party dissolved after the statehood stir started in June, she said: “We want a positive response from the Centre as we will not be able to control the Gorkha people who already feel let down by the lifting of the bandh and are ang-ry.” “We will not betray the people unlike Binay Tamang and Anit Thapa.”

Though home minister Singh has not specifical­ly announced the possibilit­y of a ‘tripartite’ meeting between the Centre, GJM and the West Bengal government, Bimal Gurung has been insisting that his party will talk if the Centre mediates in the dialogue.

The GJM is wary that the Mamata Banerjee-led West Bengal government may project expelled GJM central committee leaders Binay Tamang and Anit Thapa, who were appointed chairman and vice-chairman of the board of administra­tors of the GTA, as the official representa­tives of the hills party.

“The Union home minister gave a face saver to Gurung,” said Thapa after Singh’s announceme­nt. “Life was already returning to normal. The Union home minister has not promised tripartite talks. He has also not said whether the meeting would discuss the Gorkhaland issue ,” he said.

Gurung had earlier said the bandh would continue till the Centre calls a tripartite meeting to discuss the Gorkhaland issue.

West Bengal tourism minister Gautam Deb said the state government has not been intimated about any tripartite dialogue on the Darjeeling impasse.

“The Union home minister’s announceme­nt (of a meeting to discuss issues relating to Darjeeling) could have come much earlier. It is just an escape route for Bimal Gurung, who has lost the popular support of the hill people,” Deb told HT over phone from Siliguri. NEW DELHI: The government will raise ~2.08 trillion through market borrowings in the second half of the current fiscal year, sticking to its budget, but does not rule out the possibilit­y of selling more bonds for additional spending.

The majority of the borrowing would be completed by December, economic affairs secretary Subhash Chandra Garg said in a press briefing on Thursday. According to calendar released by the Reserve Bank of India, the government will raise ~1.65 trillion by the end of December.

Garg said the need for additional borrowing would be assessed in December once the supplement­ary demand for grants is placed in Parliament. He said the government was sticking to the fiscal deficit target of 3.2% of GDP “as of now.”

With economic growth sagging to a three-year low of 5.7% in the June quarter, debate about the merits of a fiscal stimulus has taken centre stage. In the 2017-18 Union budget, the government pegged its aggregate gross market borrowing at ~5.8 trillion.

It had front-loaded borrowings in the first half of the fiscal year when it raised ~3.72 trillion. Fiscal deficit reached ~5.05 trillion for April-july or 92.4% of the budgeted target for the current financial year, meaning there is little elbow room left for the government to boost spending without breaching the target.

According to Rupa Rege Nitsure, group chief economist at L&T Financial Services, by sticking to the borrowing numbers, the government has sent a positive signal and avoided negative implicatio­ns on ratings.

“By December, they will have a better view of the revenue shortfall because currently there are some problems with GST,” Nitsure said. On Thursday, the RBI also notified that the limits for foreign portfolio investors for October-december increased by ~8,000 crore for government securities and ~6,200 crore in state developmen­t loans.

 ?? HT ?? The 104day shutdown ended on Tuesday and life returned to normal in Darjeeling after Union home minister Rajnath Singh’s assurance of a meeting to discuss ‘all issues’.
HT The 104day shutdown ended on Tuesday and life returned to normal in Darjeeling after Union home minister Rajnath Singh’s assurance of a meeting to discuss ‘all issues’.

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