The Jerusalem Post

Two dead as violence hits India’s Darjeeling hills

- • By PROMIT MUKHERJEE and SUBRATA NAGCHOUDUR­Y

MUMBAI (Reuters) – Two people have been killed as fresh violence erupted in India’s Darjeeling hills in protests over the killing of a member of an ethnic minority, police said on Sunday.

The region’s Nepali-speaking Gorkha community has since last month held protests demanding a separate state, Gorkhaland, within India to protect their Himalayan culture. They have regularly clashed with the police. Seven civilians have died while dozens of security personnel have been injured.

The eastern state of West Bengal, where the tea-growing region of Darjeeling is located, has for the second time in three weeks deployed troops to keep the peace, an army spokesman said.

The killing on late Friday of 31-yearold Tashi Bhutia, a supporter of the Gorkha National Liberation Front – one of the two political parties leading the protest – led to escalation of the violence in the tourist town.

A senior police officer in Darjeeling said Bhutia might have been killed in cross-firing when security forces were attacked. The officer did not wish to be named.

The protesters also torched Sonada Railway Station – a UNESCO-listed heritage site – while sporadic violence ensued in various other parts of the town.

The unrest in the region has also hurt economical­ly, with trade and business completely shut down and exports disrupted of “second flush” tea crop, one of the world’s most expensive teas, exclusivel­y produced in Darjeeling.

At least 1,200 people died during the first Gorkhaland protests in the 1980s.

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