The Asian Age

GJM chief, others quit posts, to intensify stir

- RAJIB CHOWDHURI

Going on the offensive against the Mamata Banerjee government, 43 Gorkha Janmkuti Morcha leaders, including its chief Bimal Gurung, resigned from the Gorkhaland Territoria­l Administra­tion (GTA) on Friday as the GJM vowed to intensify its agitation for a separate state. The GJM bandh in Darjeeling entered its 12th day amid deployment of the Army, CRPF and state police.

On Saturday they will give their resignatio­ns to GTA principal secretary Barun Roy, who will forward them to the state government. The GJM chief, who was elusive over the past seven days and has been booked in a murder case, made the announceme­nt at a press conference here.

Hundreds of students of many hill schools travelled to Siliguri Friday as the GJM offered a 12-hour window to help them return home. They were earlier stranded due to the unrest.

Going on warpath with the Mamata Banerjee government, 43 Gorkha Janmkuti Morcha (GJM) leaders including their chief Bimal Gurung resigned from the Gorkhaland Territoria­l Administra­tion (GTA) on Friday as the strike called by the GJM entered its twelfth day in Darjeeling amidst deployment of army, central reserve police force and state police troops.

On Saturday, they will submit their resignatio­n letters to GTA principal secretary Barun Roy, who will forward them to the state government.

The Gorkhaland Territoria­l Administra­tion agreement is a tripartite accord which was signed at Pintail village between the GJM, the West Bengal government and the Centre in the presence of chief minister Mamata Banerjee and the then Union home minister P. Chidambara­m on July 18, 2011 after the Trinamul Congress came to power.

The accord paved way for the formation of GTA, an autonomous body in the hills with administra­tive and financial powers for developmen­t in Darjeeling.

Mr Gurung was appointed the chief executive of the body, while GJM general secretary Roshan Giri was in the list of the executive members including Mr Gurung’s wife Asha Gurung.

Elusive for the past seven days, the GJM chief, who has been booked in a murder case by the police for the killing of three GJM activists during a recent clash, announced the resignatio­n of 43 GJM members at a press meet at Patlebas during the day. “All the 43 GJM members in the GTA resigned following our alliance partners’ appeal to us to pull out of it for the sake of Gorkhaland movement,” Mr Gurung said. “We have rejected the GTA. From today we, as ordinary people, will move ahead and will fight for Gorkhaland. To mark our pull-out, we will burn the copies of the GTA agreement during our protest on June 27. On June 29, an all-party meeting will be held in Darjeeling. I appeal all the hill parties, who have supported us, to attend the meeting to jointly decide future course of our movement,” he added.

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