Hindustan Times (Jalandhar)

‘Sacrifices of dear ones in vain’

Families of those who laid down their lives for the cause of Gorkhaland in the mid1980s are unimpresse­d by the shrill rhetoric and rallies, feel martyrs’ deaths have been forgotten

- Probir Pramanik probir.pramanik@htlive.com

DARJEELING:But for a small memorial built at Singamari Phatak, the spot where he was shot, few in Darjeeling remember Bhupen Mothay who laid down his life in June 1987 for the cause of a separate Gorkhaland state.

Like in the mid-1980s when the demand for a separate state plunged the hills of north Bengal into violence, Darjeeling is witness to fresh turmoil as a new generation of activists takes to the streets to push for the same demand.

But Mothay’s mother Tara remains a silent spectator, unimpresse­d by the shrill rhetoric or raucous rallies for statehood.

Her son was among the 1,200 people who were killed between 1985 and 1987. But the sacrifice of Mothay, who was killed in police firing, has all but been forgotten and Tara is bitter.

“I lost my son who was the only earning member of the family. He was the eldest of my three sons. But what purpose did his death serve?” she asks.

Forced to work as a maid servant for a living, Tara got a onetime compensati­on of ~8,000 for her son’s death in 1989. She gets a monthly old-age pension of ~750, but that too has not been paid for the last six months.

“His sacrifice for Gorkhaland is forgotten. He gave his life in vain,” she says.

Her biggest grouse is reserved for local politician­s at the helm of the Gorkhaland agitation. Though youngsters like Mothay heeded their calls and paid with their lives, the leaders settled for autonomous councils rather than a separate state in the past.

The agitation of the 1980s was suspended by Subash Ghising after the Darjeeling Gorkha Hill Council (DGHC) was formed. Bimal Gurung, the prime mover behind the current agitation, had signed up for the Gorkhaland Territoria­l Administra­tion (GTA) in 2011.

Tara isn’t the only one in Darjeeling who isn’t swayed by the tumult in the hills. Kishore Gurung, 61, is another.

Once a prominent foot soldier of Ghising, he was a name to reckon with in the Darjeeling hills. His sacrifices — he lost his father and two brothers during the 1985-87 unrest — made him into part of folklore.

But that was then. Now, Gurung is more of a pariah with no part to play in the latest round of protests being described by many as Gorkhaland II.

First, his mentor Ghising fell out of favour and had to flee the hills.

Two, the new Gorkhaland leaders have no place for him.

“I took up arms, inspired by Subash Ghising’s call for a separate state of Gorkhaland and was involved in a series of attacks on the CRPF and the CPI(M) workers,” recounts Gurung, sitting in his house above the Happy Valley Tea estate some 10km away from Darjeeling.

At the height of the 1980s movement, he was a wanted man with 26 criminal cases lodged against him. His father Dil Bahadur was allegedly killed by the security forces, brother Bal Bahadur was killed in a clash with CPI(M) activists, and another brother, Binod, was murdered after being abducted. He has lost stature and prestige since with some of the current Gorkhaland leaders even describing him as ‘anti-Gorkhaland’.

Gurung is a far cry from his fiery past and now advocates peaceful agitation for realising a separate Gorkhaland.

“It is an emotive issue but people must realise that political parties are playing games and the local politician­s of the hills are their pawns,” he says. Though far less enthusiast­ic than what she was in the 1980s, even Tara — Mothay’s mother — is all for a separate state.

“Politician­s have betrayed us, but if Gorkhaland is created, my son’s soul will have peace,” she says, surveying the current unrest.

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 ?? BIKRAM SASHANKER/HT ?? Kishore Gurung shows the picture of his father who he lost along with his two brothers during the 198587 unrest. (Left) Tara with a picture of her son, Bhupen Mothay, who laid down his life in June 1987 for the cause of a separate Gorkhaland state.
BIKRAM SASHANKER/HT Kishore Gurung shows the picture of his father who he lost along with his two brothers during the 198587 unrest. (Left) Tara with a picture of her son, Bhupen Mothay, who laid down his life in June 1987 for the cause of a separate Gorkhaland state.

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