Showing posts with label Darjeeling live news. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Darjeeling live news. Show all posts

Army deployed in Darjeeling, BJP demands peace Committee

2:21 AM
TMC

BJP demands peace committee to contain violence in Darjeeling

KOLKATA: The BJP today criticised the West Bengal government for failing to contain violence in the Darjeeling hills and demanded that a peace committee be formed to restore peace. "The TMC administration has completely failed to contain violence in the hills.

There was no shut down or violence in the hills for last three years. But, the TMC, which is trying to establish its own political hegemony in the hills, did everything to provoke violence and disturbance in the hills," BJP MP from Darjeeling S S Ahluwalia told PTI.

Ahluwalia questioned the reason behind deployment of the Army when the entire state cabinet is present in the hills. "When the entire state cabinet including the Chief Minister is present in the hills, why did the administration failed to control the situation? What was the reason behind deployment of Army? We will talk to the Union Home Ministry regarding the situation.

We demand that a peace committee be formed immediately in the hills with GJM and state administration to restore peace and normalcy," he said. Two columns of Army were deployed in the restive Darjeeling town today after Gorkha Janmukti Morcha supporters clashed with the police, damaged police vehicles and set some of them ablaze while Chief Minister Mamata Banerjee was holding a cabinet meeting there.

(via:indianexpress)

MTV Roadies accident in Darjeeling Pesok

7:56 PM

MTV Roadies Meet With an Accident
An accident took place near Pesok view point in Darjeeling. A mini bus carrying crew of roadies fell down the road. They were shooting in Mirik and Darjeeling hills  recently. According to the report there has been several incidents of accidents in the same spot in the past. The Roadies crew made a mistake by not taking the local driver said one of the locals.

Details of the injured persons:
Magen Basu Matary (36) Ashis Ansari(24) Akash Patel (25) Surendra Pràdhàn (35) Sidarth Soni(24) John Britto(33) Sandeep Bamkar(29) Bijoy kumar Panday(32) Rabi Rajan kumar(24) Santosh Jaiswal(35) Gawrab Pazoz(32) and the vehicle no is AS 01FC9100.
All assistance have been provided to the injured, who have been taken to Kalimpong and Siliguri hospital.

Thank God, there have been no casualties and we are hopeful it remains that way.

Via TheDC

Darjeeling Cycle rally - adventure lovers initiative

7:37 AM

Writes Vivek Chhetri

Darjeeling, Jan. 1: Around 40 Darjeeling residents today pedalled across the hill town in an attempt to curb air pollution and promote the use of environment-friendly mode of transport on a day the Delhi government imposed an odd-even number restriction on vehicles.

A group of adventure lovers in the hill town had called on cyclists to pedal from Darjeeling to Sukhiapokhri, a distance of about 20km, and back.

The voluntary initiative was supported by the district administration.

Today around 10.30am, the participants, including two women and several students, turned up at Chowrasta to start the rally.

The rally began with Darjeeling district magistrate Anurag Srivastava and district police chief Amit P. Javalgi in the lead.

"When I heard about the idea, I thought it had to be promoted. There is a lot of potential for the sport (cycling) in the hills," said Srivastava who pedalled up to the Gorkha Rangamach Bhavan area.

The organisers, among whom were businessmen and bicycle enthusiasts Sangay Sherpa, Urgen Sherpa, Dawa Sherpa and Shekar Biswakarma, said the objective of the rally was to spread a message among the hill people on the need to take up eco-friendly modes of transport.

"We want to make mountain biking trendy in the hills so that people start using cycles more often. Mountain biking can also be an additional attraction for tourists, apart from its health benefits. If we can all stop using vehicles even for a single week day (in a week), it would go a long way in preserving the environment of the region," said Sangay.

In Delhi, the government policy of odd-even vehicular restriction came into effect today.

The pilot plan, which attempts to reduce air pollution in the city, would be in force till January 15.

The restriction would be in force from 8am to 8pm.

Vehicles whose number plates end with an odd digit would ply on odd dates. On even days, vehicles having even numbers would run.

The fine for violation would be Rs 2,000 under the Motor Vehicles Act.

In Darjeeling, Sean Allan Lepcha, 12, a Class VII student of St Joseph's School(North Point), was taking part in a cycle rally for the first time.

"Recently, my father got a mountain bike for Rs 80,000. When I heard about the rally, I decided to take part. I believe that we need to do our bit to save the environment," he said.

Ashwin Tamang, 11, was one of the youngest participants.

Forty seven-year-old Uday Lama, a resident of Hooker Road here, said: "I have lived at Rennes in France for a long time and there I saw people who are 70-75 years old cycle regularly. I believe that cycling needs to be promoted, mainly among younger people, who are more into computer games and hardly indulge in outdoor activities. That is why I decided to take part in the rally."

Trishna Rai, 24, a resident of Darjeeling who stays in Kathmandu where she teaches at The British School, said: "This seems such a good adventure and I have come here to participate as this is also about women empowerment. I started cycling recently and I do it whenever I come here."

Soon after the rally began, the district administration launched a Hunger Free Darjeeling initiative with local NGOs, Who Cares, Sahoyogi Hath and All India Women Conference.

Around 300 street-dwellers were given food and blankets.

The administration plans to involve NGOs, hotels, restaurants and other associations in the distribution of food among street dwellers everyday.

Source Telegraph

Darjeeling Woman Pushed off Train by GRP Personnel

1:05 PM
A woman passenger was pushed off a running train by a GRP constable following an altercation with her husband, police said today.
The woman, Nesa Giri (34), was travelling with her husband, Ramesh Giri (39), in the Teesta-Torsa Express to NJP station on way to her home in Darjeeling from Azimganj station in Murshidabad last night.
Near Farakka, the ticket collector and the GRP constable engaged in a heated argument with Ramesh Giri. As the train neared Farakka station, Nesa Giri was pushed out by the GRP personnel, a police official said.
The woman was rushed to Beniagram Hospital in Murshidabad from where she was taken to Malda General Hospital, hospital sources said.
Her husband, Ramesh Giri, has lodged a complaint with the GRP at Farakka station, the police official said. 
Source - TNIE, via TheDC

Police complaint against Darjeeling Red Cross for cutting trees

2:20 PM
Darjeeling 16th July: Early morning today, it surfaced on the social media that trees on the Red Cross premises in Darjeeling were being cut and the planks from these trees were being loaded into pick up vans. Later when it was revealed that they did not have any permission the forest  authorities seized Wood and also filed Police Complaint Against Red Cross.
Police complaint against Darjeeling Red Cross for cutting trees
Trees on the Red Cross premises in Darjeeling were being cut and the planks from these trees
 were being loaded into a pick up vans
The incident have raised the serious question of the very existence of the most prominent NGO which is housed at the same Red Cross building where it took place, the Federation of Societies for Environmental Protection [FOSEP], which claims to champion the cause of Environmental Conservation in the region.

When FOSEP had nothing to say or do when the trees were being chopped down right under their nose, the concerned and responsible citizens of Darjeeling and Let's Green Darjeeling(N.G.O.) with the help of social media (The Darjeeling Chronicle) have saved the day.

It all started when TheDC published a post  [Detailshttp://on.fb.me/1Of6qTCon 14th July saying "Some people have been cutting trees in the Red Cross premises for the past few days... and it's two more trees out of the town landscape ..." and raised the questions like Who gave the permission to CUT DOWN these trees?? Why is FOSEP quiet?? Why are none of the NGOs or Civil Society members concerned?.

When the report led Ms. Sumitra Tamang, a member of the Let's Green Darjeeling initiative to step in Mr. Prem Moktan from Red Cross had the reason for falling those trees, "these will cause landslides or damage homes in the neighbourhood." Mr. Prem Moktan allegedly told her that, their plan is to cut down all the trees below Red Cross building, and plant around some Rhododendron sapling.

Following the report from The Darjeeling Chronicle, Darjeeling Sub-Divisional Land Reforms Officer confirmed that he had not given any permission. He then went to visit the Red Cross Premises and after inspecting the area found that Red Cross did not have any permission from anywhere to cut those trees. Finally he filed a complaint against Red Cross authorities for felling the trees without any permission.

With inputs from The Darjeeling Chronicle

Darjeeling life slows as Porters leave to homes in Nepal

9:41 PM
The Nepal earthquake has slowed down life in Darjeeling as porters who form the backbone of the hills and are mostly from the neighbouring country have left to be with their families.
Porters are an indispensable part of the hill's daily life and they ferry almost every item, be it rice sacks, furniture or other heavy goods.
A woman porter carries goods in Darjeeling on Monday
A woman porter carries goods in Darjeeling on Monday. Picture by Suman Tamang
Sources have said there are around 1,000 porters in the hill town and more than 90 per cent of them are from Nepal. According to sources, almost 70 per cent of the workers have left for Nepal after the quake.

Suman Chhetri, the managing director of Grihalaxmi, an LPG distribution agency here, today said: "We are facing lot of problems. I had 30 porters working with our agency but today, I am left with only 10 and even they are expected to leave for Nepal soon. Usually, porters ferry around 600 cylinders but for the past few days, we have been able to distribute only 200 to 250 cylinders daily."
Porters ferry cylinders from distribution points to houses, hotels and restaurants across the town.
Hardware business has also been affected.

Binay Aggarwal, the proprietor of Jay Hardware, at Judge Bazar here, said: "I have 16 porters but only two are with me today. Unloading material from trucks every morning is proving to be very difficult. Our business is labour intensive and lack of workers is hampering it big time. It is taking hours to unload trucks. It is difficult for us not to allow porters to go on leave. I sent 90 T-shirts, tiffin boxes, umbrellas and Rs 21,000 when they left." He said he had no idea when the workers would be back.

Dipesh Roka, of Roka Hardware at Unique Market in Darjeeling, said: "Since morning, my customers have been ordering several items but I am unable to send those to them. I had three porters who would work regularly but all have left."
Although porters claim that they are a 2,000 strong workforce in Darjeeling town, a few years ago, when Darjeeling municipality had carried out a drive to register them, 750-odd workers had enrolled themselves.
Tula Man Thami, 57, a porter often seen at the Darjeeling Motor Stand, said: "Normally, you will find a group of 20-25 porters here everyday. Now, we are just four here."

Tula Man stays at Eden Dham Gully in Darjeeling. He is from Kuwapa village in Dolakha district in Nepal. His wife, son and daughter-in-law are in Nepal. "I managed to speak to them a few days ago. My house has been totally damaged in the quake. I have decided to stay here as I returned to Darjeeling only a month back. What will I do in Nepal? I have no money. I need to earn here."
Sunita Thami, also from the same village, said: "Almost all my acquaintances have left for Nepal. But I decided to stay back as my husband and two children, an eight-year-old son and a two-year-old daughter, are here. What will we do with no money there?"

Asked if their income had increased because of fewer porters in Darjeeling, Tula Man said: "It has increased slightly. Earlier, we used to earn about Rs 200 to Rs 250 a day but now we are earning about Rs 100 more."

But Ganga Sharma, 49, whose husband died 16 years ago, had a different tale to tell. "How much can one earn? There is lot of work now but we get tired by the afternoons. Our earning has not gone up much. It is difficult to climb up and down the hilly terrain," said the mother of four from Lamidhara in Dolakha.

More than 90 per cent Nepalese porters who work in Darjeeling are from Dolakha .
Porter Amrita Tamang, 47, who stands near Auto Point here, said: "We want to go back but it is difficult. My house is totally damaged. My sister and her husband have reached the village and I am worried about my father who is a kidney patient. My sister told me that my mother got buried in the quake and villagers rescued her. She has a cut in her hand. Otherwise she is fine."

Usually, one can find 30-35 porters at Auto Point but today less than 10 were seen.
Some said it took at least two days to reach their houses in Nepal from here. "I don't know how long it will take now," Ganga said. Roka said some porters said that a group of 10 has hired a vehicle for Rs 25,000 to go to Dolakha.

 Source: Telegraph


Darjeeling Toy train accident in Kurseong, one tourist dead

8:46 AM
A toy train carrying more than 50 tourists hurtled down sloping rail tracks in Kurseong yesterday as its wheels skidded, causing the death of a Calcutta lady who may have fallen off.

The alertness of a Siliguri-based businessman saved lives in the three coaches. Giridharilal Gan, a bookseller from Siliguri, turned the wheel-like emergency brake - each coach has one - as the guard on duty on the train had jumped off like several passengers had.
Darjeeling Toy train accident in Kurseong, one tourist dead
(Bottom left) The toy train at the accident spot; Giridharilal Gan (above), the bookseller from
Siliguri whose presence of mind saved co-passengers. Picture by Suman Tamang
Tourists today spoke of the horrifying "death-train-like" experience as they saw a co-passenger leaping out with a kid in her arms.

According to co-passengers, Beliaghata's Moly Pal, 51, jumped, too, but did not survive. Her brother, however, said Moly may have fallen off.

When the 57 tourists started the Jungle Safari ride from Siliguri Junction at 10.35am on Republic Day, the train was late by 35 minutes.

The to-and-fro ride from Siliguri to Gayabari in Kurseong subdivision, snaking through the Mahananda wildlife park and with a 15-minute halt before return, takes five-and-a-half hours. Tourists embarking at 10am can expect to be back in Siliguri around 3.30pm.

But as the train started late yesterday, the operators said they would not go the whole stretch up to Gayabari - 35km from Siliguri Junction - but till Tindharia, which is 30km from Siliguri. As a consolation to the tourists, the driver said there would be a stop for about an hour at Tindharia, so tourists can go to nearby shops.

Toy trains rarely move at a speed more than 20kmph, making them inconvenient for long rides or daily commute.

The train reached Tindharia at 12.45pm and started for Siliguri at 1.45pm.

Gan said: "I was in a group of 24 people and we were in the last of the three coaches. As the train was moving downhill, it seemed to have picked up speed. Then we saw a person jump off and realised something must be wrong," Gan said. "Soon, the guard, who was in our coach, also leapt out."

Seeing the guard jump off, some of the women passengers panicked and started crying. "The doors and windows were rattling. People were yelling," Gan said.

By then, some passengers had started shouting that the brakes had failed - the railways did not agree with this theory, though an official said the wheels slipped on the tracks despite the application of the brakes.

Gan said he knew there was a wheel-like emergency brake at the rear of every coach as "I have travelled in toy train several times before". "I ran to the back of the coach. I rotated the brake wheel thrice. Nothing happened, the train was still hurtling down. When I rotated the wheel the fourth time, it screeched to a halt after couple of minutes," he said.

The train came to a halt near Chunabhatti station, which is a couple of kilometres from Tindharia.

"This entire thing happened in five to seven minutes, but the experience was horrifying. Either the train would have gone off the tracks and fallen into a gorge ahead or it would have rammed into homes and shops at the side of the tracks and killed more people," the 44-year-old, who has a bookshop in Siliguri's Collegepara, said.

After the train stopped, local people helped the passengers disembark.

The driver, Gan said, was still in the engine room. "He said there had been a technical problem and that he had no way of stopping the train other than applying the emergency brake which I had done."

Nikita Saha, a Siliguri-based dentist on the train with her eight-year-old daughter Neha, said the morning "joy ride became a death ride".

She said: "Some passengers were jumping off. A lady who did that lost her life, it was horrifying." The "quick action of this gentleman (Gan) saved all of us who did not jump off," Nikita said.

Kartik Das, another Siliguri resident, said he saw "a woman jump from the first coach. Within seconds, another woman carrying a child in her lap, followed."

He said when the train stopped "we ran uphill along the tracks to locate those who had jumped off. We found the woman, who had jumped first, lying near the tracks, unconscious. The woman who had jumped after her with her child had suffered injuries but both were conscious. We called up the police."

The lady who had fallen off or jumped first was 51-year-old Moly Pal of Beliaghata.

Eyewitnesses said Moly had rammed against the wall of a house when she fell. But her brother said Moly's family on the train saw her chin hit the locomotive as she fell.

The ordeal for the passengers did not end with the ride. "There was no railway official to help us reach Siliguri. Each of us had to call for vehicles from Siliguri and we returned home in the evening," Nikita said.

A police officer later said three people suffered injuries when they jumped off.

"A woman died and three others got injured. The post-mortem was conducted at NBMCH today and her body was sent to Calcutta with her relatives," the police officer of Kurseong subdivision said.

When asked what snag led to the accident, a railway official said the wheels slipped on the tracks after the brake was applied. He refused to call it a failure of the braking system.

"There was some slipping of wheels on the tracks when the train was travelling downhill. This happens when brakes are applied forcefully in a moving train.... An inquiry committee will investigate the incident," said A.K. Sharma, the divisional manager (Katihar division) of the Northeast Frontier Railway.

Asked whether any action would be taken against the guard who had jumped off instead of operating the emergency brake, Sharma said: "I have got the information and referred it to the inquiry committee. If found guilty, we will definitely take necessary action against the guard".

Moly's family said her husband and four relatives were on the train.

"They were coming back to Siliguri. The train was coming down from the mountains at a very high speed unusual for a toy train," said Sumitava Pal, Moly's brother who stays at Siliguri. "It is not clear whether my sister tried to jump off or she fell down," he said.

Gan today said: "It's like I escaped death."

Source: Telegraph

Sujay Ghatak Darjeeling Congress candidate faces ire of the Hill Congress

12:37 PM
Darjeeling: Sujay Ghatak, the Congress candidate for the Darjeeling Lok Sabha seat, had to face the ire of party leaders in the hills for not turning up at the party office in Darjeeling on the day he filed his nomination.

Sujay Ghatak Darjeeling Lok Sabha 2014 Congress candidate
Sujay Ghatak Darjeeling Lok Sabha 2014 Congress candidate


Ghatak apologised for his oversight and later, he said all differences in the party had been sorted out.

He had filed his nomination before the district magistrate here on March 24. The Congress candidate was accorded a rousing reception on that day by Trinamul supporters who mistook his rally for that of Bhaichung Bhutia.

However, Ghatak was at the receiving end today when he stepped into the Congress (hill) office here. Ghatak immediately went into a huddle with leaders like Nakul Chandra Chhetri, Lawrence P.T. Lama, Chabbi Rai, Hem Rai and K.B. Chhetri.

Waiting journalists could hear the hill leaders tearing apart Ghatak for breaking what they called a Congress tradition. “It has been a tradition of the Congress that candidates first come to the Darjeeling office and the supporters accompany them to file the nominations. Why did you fail to come to the party office? If this is the attitude, then no Congress worker from the hills will vote for you,” a leader was heard shouting at Ghatak.

Ghatak admitted that the hill Congress leaders had shouted at him during the meeting. “I admit that my senior leaders shouted at me today and I also understand their anger. The problem arose because of some miscommunication and I apologised for not coming to the Congress office on that day I filed the nomination. But I am happy that there are no more differences in the party after the meeting. We are part of a big family and at times, such issues do crop up and they get solved also.”

The Congress candidate said he would sit with the hill leaders and finalise the date for a public meeting in Darjeeling. “We are trying to get senior Congress leaders and even Rahul Gandhi to address our meeting in Darjeeling. We want to work towards removing the mental divide between the hills and the plains,” said Ghatak.

Source: Telegraph

Darjeeling: S.S. Ahluwalia questions Trinamul Congress spending in their campaigns

12:25 PM
The BJP nominee for Darjeeling Lok Sabha seat, S.S. Ahluwalia, today wanted to know how Trinamul Congress could spend huge sums of money in their campaigns when their leader was wearing “hawai chappals”.

Ahluwalia in the gurdwara in Siliguri on Friday
Ahluwalia in the gurdwara in Siliguri on Friday

Ahluwalia kicked off his election campaign in the plains by offering prayers at a gurdwara here today and attended a few workers’ meeting in and around Siliguri.

After arriving in Bagdogra on March 19, Ahluwalia had moved to the hills on the same day. Since then, he had been campaigning across the three Assembly segments in the hills.

From tomorrow, the BJP candidate backed by the Gorkha Janmukti Morcha will canvass for votes in the Assembly seats of Siliguri, Matigara-Naxalbari, Phansidewa and Chopra, all in the plains.

Around 9.30am today, Ahluwalia, along with BJP leaders and workers, reached a gurdwara on Sevoke Road and offered prayers.

“We have been hearing allegations levelled against me by Mamata Banerjee that I am buying votes with money and carrying bags full of cash. It is a baseless allegation and thousands of people have seen me campaigning across the hills in the past one week,” Ahluwalia said after coming out of the gurdwara.

“I would like to ask the source of Trinamul’s money. While someone is wearing hawai chappals, her party candidates are spending huge sums in their campaigns. Where is this money coming from?”

The BJP candidate was attributing to Trinamul chief Mamata Banerjee who wears hawai chappals and seeks to lead a simple life.

The chief minister had alleged during the meetings of Trinamul candidate Bhaichung Bhutia in recent days that Ahluwalia was buying votes from the people.

Today, Ahluwalia referred to his association with Mamata when they were in the Chhatra Parishad. “Both Mamata Banerjee and I had worked together in the Chhatra Parishad and know everything about each other. It is better that she and other Trinamul leaders refrain from making such baseless allegations (against me),” he said.

Told about the Bengal unit of the BJP’s stand against the creation of Gorkhaland, he said: “There are other issues which need focus. Roads across north Bengal are in a pitiable state. Major road works had been undertaken during the term of Atal Behari Vajpayee. The region has been neglected by the state and Centre and no major development has been carried out. We are focusing on these issues right now and intending to address them as an MP in future. We are aware of the demand for a separate state but it is not the only issue that is highlighted in the campaign,” Ahluwalia said.

He also sought to question Mamata’s stand on Gorkhaland.

“Mamata Banerjee is speaking at length against Gorkhaland and our party. But back in 2000, she was an NDA ally and a railway minister when three new states were formed for better governance. She had also allied with the Morcha ahead of the Assembly polls (in 2011) and invited Morcha leaders to a public meeting at Brigade Parade Ground in Calcutta on February 3 this year,” said Ahluwalia.

The three new states — Uttarkhand, Chhattisgarh and Jharkhand — were formed in 2000 by the NDA government.

Ahluwalia attended several workers’ meeting in and around Siliguri today. BJP insiders said Ahluwalia would also interact with people from different walks of life and visit localities in four Assembly segments in the plains in the days to come.

Asked for Trinamul’s reaction to Ahluwalia’s charge, minister Gautam Deb said: “People have witnessed the agitation in the hills and the plains and know how the economy of north Bengal was affected. Some leaders are making political remarks only to slander the image of Trinamul. But they will not succeed in their intentions.”

Source: Telegraph

Is Darjeeling to Bengal what Varanasi is turning out to be for India?

7:02 PM
Is Darjeeling to Bengal what Varanasi is turning out to be for India? In many senses, yes. It is the microcosm of some of the big fights we will witness when the largest democracy in the world goes to vote, but also representative of the larger issues that the state is facing. 

Darjeeling in Bengal
Darjeeling in Bengal 

While the Trinamool Congress has floated football player and a local hero for Darjeeling, Baichung Bhutia, following a trend of nominating celebrities in several constituencies, the BJP has floated its vice-president SS Ahluwalia here after its 2009 winner Jaswant Singh wanted to contest from his home state Rajasthan. Saman Pathak, son of well-known leader Ananda Pathak, is the CPI(M) candidate from Darjeeling, a man known for his clean image.   

Apart from them are the two local parties, Gorkha Janmukti Morcha (GJM) and the Gorkha National Liberation Front (GNLF). The GJM, formed in 2007 by Bimal Gurung who has led the fight for a separate Gorkhaland singlehandedly after he fell out with GNLF’s Subhash Ghising, had won the three assembly seats of Darjeeling, Kalimpong and Kurseong in the 2011 Assembly elections and turned Darjeeling into a safe seat for BJP by supporting Singh in 2009. This time, GJM has once again decided to support the BJP, who in turn have promised to support the formation of a separate state of Gorkhaland if it comes to power at the Centre.

The final twist in the story arrived when the GNLF’s Subhash Ghising re-entered Darjeeling this week, after a forced exile of five years. All set to begin his second innings in politics, his first statement on reaching Darjeeling was, “I am the original Subhash Ghising. And this time I will stay.” It is not difficult to see Trinamool Congress’ support in bringing him back as an attempt to foil the coalition between Gurung and BJP. Ghising aims at incorporating North Bengal under the Sixth Schedule to give the area autonomy of rule and does not aim for a separate state anymore. This suits the current state government as well as the CPI(M), whose current Darjeeling district secretary Jibesh Sarkar has given out an open invitation for support from GNLF. 

Ghising is not making his stand clear as yet, though he will be happy to find support in the two major state parties if he has to frame a formidable “other” to Gurung’s GJM. 
Darjeeling has never been an easy part of West Bengal. A senior editor in a newspaper once mentioned that Darjeeling never faced what the revolt in Lalgarh faced in terms of state repression due to its strategic geographical position (the connection to North East) and the role of the Gorkhas in the Indian army.

But the demand for Gorkhaland has also been moulded over time. After coming to power in 2011, Mamata Banerjee signed a memorandum for Gorkhaland Territorial Administration, and tried to shift the discourse from state autonomy to peace and development. Though unable to reopen the Dheklapara tea garden, the government brought in free cooked food to the workers and free healthcare provisions. Mamata also envisions Kalimpong as a tourist destination as big as Darjeeling. 

With the BJP coming out in support of a separate Gorkha state, Mamata Banerjee has warned that West Bengal will not turn out to be the next Andhra Pradesh. Nevertheless, she has realised that the elections are significant to make a point to the GJM who has now found an ally in its call for separate statehood. Hence, by allowing Ghising to come back, Mamata is trying to ensure that Darjeeling will not be a comfortable “safe” seat for BJP.   

However, it remains to be seen what the people of Darjeeling will vote for. Peace, development, star power, an old leader who they once saw as a champion of their rights, or will the battle between more autonomy and a separate state figure most prominent.
Keywords: Darjeeling, Jaswant Singh, SS Ahluwalia, West Bengal, Mamata Banerjee, Trinamool Congress,  Baichung Bhutia , Gorkhaland, Gorkha Janmukti Morcha, Gorkha National Liberation Front, Bimal Gurung, Subhash Ghissing, Saman Pathak 

Rajanya Bose
Source: dnaindia

12-year-old girl allegedly raped in Kagjhora Darjeeling

9:50 AM
Darjeeling : A 12-year-old girl was allegedly raped by her paternal uncle, Amrit Bahadur Pradhan (45), on the night of March 23. The incident took place at the Kagjhora area, about a kilometre from Darjeeling town.

12-year-old girl allegedly raped in Kagjhora Darjeeling
12-year-old girl allegedly raped in Kagjhora Darjeeling

Police sources said a complaint was lodged against Pradhan at the Darjeeling police station by the victim’s maternal uncle on March 24 after she narrated the heinous incident to her family members. The accused was arrested the next day from his residence and produced before Darjeeling court from where he was sent to police custody.

It has been learnt that the accused is a migrant from Nepal and had settled here after marrying a local woman. Pradhan is a carpenter by profession. The victim, a fourth standard student, is undergoing treatment at a hospital here. 

Source: (EOIC)

Darjeeling Lok Sabha Election Close battle, Ghising may determine the outcome

1:30 AM
TMC
Darjeeling Lok Sabha Election - Close battle on the cards in Darjeeling Lok Sabha Election 2014. A football star, an academician and a former parliamentarian are locked in a battle in North Bengal’s Darjeeling hills, where the Gorkhaland movement rages. And the results will determine whether Gorkhaland would be the next Telangana.

Darjeeling Lok Sabha Election - Close battle on the cards
Darjeeling Lok Sabha Election - Close battle on the cards

The ruling Trinamool Congress, which poured cold water on the statehood demand, has fielded India’s former soccer captain, Bhaichung Bhutia.

The two others in the three-cornered contest are BJP’s SS Ahluwalia, and independent candidate Mahendra Lama.

Ahluwalia is backed by the pro-Gorkhaland Gorkha Janamukti Morcha, which recently entered into an alliance with the BJP. But he faces a tough contest. 
Unlike the last time, GJM’s appeal has diminished considerably.

“There is a perception that Bimal Gurung has compromised on the statehood demand. The 40-day strike — after statehood was granted to Telangana — backfired, and people were angry,” admitted a party insider. 

But the GJM, he added, still has the best “organisational network”.

The TMC is hoping to sweep the plains and get a fraction of the hill votes — the seat has three hill assembly segments, with around six lakh voters, and four in the plains with eight lakh voters. 

And party chief Mamata Banerjee has shrewdly played ethnic politics within the Nepali community by creating a Lepcha cultural board and promising a similar set up to Tamangs to wean them away from the broader Gorkha identity.

Bhutia hopes as a person from the hills, he would draw support. But he is from Sikkim, and Gangtokand Darjeeling share cold ties. Plus, there is the extra baggage of hostility to Trinamool.

“He may be a star, but people here are conscious that the party he represents is against our key issue,” said a Darjeeling lawyer on condition of anonymity.
Lama, a former vice-chancellor of Sikkim University, also poses a challenge.

Lama is committed to the statehood demand and is projecting himself as the ‘son of the soil’ against two “outsiders”. He can cut into GJM votes, but is hampered by the lack of organisational support will hurt him.   

A variable will be the stance of the chairman of Gorkha National Liberation Front, and the man who ran Darjeeling for 20 years, Subash Ghising.

After being hounded out of the hills by GJM seven years ago, he is back in Darjeeling and is understood to control around 80,000 votes. 

Which way Ghising will tilt may well determine the outcome.

Source:hindustantimes


Mamata Banerjee against bifurcation of the West Bengal, Darjeeling integral part of it

12:11 AM
Gorubathan: Sending out a strong message against bifurcation of the state, West Bengal Chief Minister Mamata Banerjee today said Darjeeling is an integral part of it and blamed Gorkha Janmukti Morcha (GJM) of trying to play divisive politics without bothering about the development of the hills.

West Bengal Chief Minister and TMC chief Mamata Banerjee with party candidate Baichung Bhutia during an election campaign rally at Naxalbari
West Bengal Chief Minister and TMC chief Mamata Banerjee with party candidate
Baichung Bhutia during an election campaign rally at Naxalbari 

"We believe in unity of all regions and communities. We don't believe in divisive politics. There are some people who are trying to play divisive politics in the hills for their own vested interests as they feel that they can become kings by doing so," she told a Trinamool Congress workers' meet in Gorubathan in West Bengal.

Ms Banerjee also accused GJM of being more interested in going to Delhi with their demand for a separate state rather than being bothered about development.

"Whenever elections come, they (GJM) go to Delhi frequently for their own vested interests of dividing people. 

If you count, you will find that they go to Delhi more than they visit Kalimpong or Kurseong.

"Why are they (GJM) shouting for Gorkhaland? We have given them GTA (Gorkha Territorial Administration) - let them work there and prove themselves. In education the order is first primary, then secondary, then higher secondary, then college, then university. But they want to go to the university without going to the primary," she said.

The Trinamool Congress chief took a dig at GJM for supporting BJP candidate SS Ahluwahlia, who she said, is an "outsider".

"They (GJM) shout too much but when it comes to polls they support outsiders. Don't they have a single leader among themselves to fight polls?" she said.

"We (Trinamool Congress) have pitted Bhaichung Bhutia, a person from the hills. What is the difference between the hills of Sikkim (from where Bhutia hails) and hills of Darjeeling. All are same," she said.

Ms Banerjee said she will continue coming to the Darjeeling hills to ensure its development.

"They (GJM) might get angry with me for coming here. But I am not bothered," she added.

Source:ndtv.

Gorkha leaders hiring politicos from Delhi to divide Bengal - Mamata Banerjee

12:06 AM
TMC
Chief Minister and Trinamool Congress supremo Mamata Banerjee today called upon the Hill people to defeat the sinister design of some Gorkha leaders to divide the state by hiring political leaders from Delhi.

Gorkha leaders hiring politicos from Delhi to divide Bengal - Mamata Banerjee
 Mamata Banerjee
Addressing an election meeting in favour of party's Darjeeling Lok Sabha seat nominee Bhaichung Bhutia, Ms Banerjee, without naming any party or leader, said 'Instead of serving people of the Hills they run often to New Delhi in an attempt to divide the state between the Hills and plains.'

Rejecting the division of West Bengal, Ms Banerjee said her government has been giving priority to development of the Hills and for this the Gorkhaland Territorial Administration (GTA) was enacted two years ago.

She also criticised the so called Gorkha leaders questioning their patriotism. 'How did these leaders not find a local or Gorkha leader for Darjeeling Lok Sabha seat? Instead they are hiring a politician from Delhi with sinister design to divide the state in the name of hill people and plains.'

Her reference was obviously to BJP leader SS Ahluwalia contesting from the seat with support from the Gorkha Janmukti Morcha (GJM).

'We have chosen a man of West Bengal, who also hails from the hills,' she said raising Bhutia's hands.

'I have been coming to the hills for the past three years with various development projects. But this time I am asking your vote on the symbol of twin flowers,' Ms Banerjee told the crowd.

She also listed a series of projects for development of Darjeeling, including Rs 455 crore for drinking water scheme

Source:24dunia

Darjeeling Communities divided over Lok Sabha Election

10:08 AM
Darjeeling: Darjeeling hills have, for the first time, witnessed communities division  over supporting candidates or parties for upcoming Lok sabha election. Leaders of different communities in the Darjeeling hills are supporting political parties covertly and overtly for the coming general elections, a trend that hasn’t been witnessed before.
Darjeeling hill Communities divided over Lok Sabha Election
Mahendra P Lama (with a khada around the neck) with supporters on his way to
 Darjeeling district magistrate’s office to submit his nomination on Tuesday. 
While a section of Lepchas is rooting for the Gorkha Janmukti Morcha-backed BJP candidate for Darjeeling Lok Sabha seat, S.S. Ahluwalia, others in the community are known to be backing the Trinamul Congress following the formation of a development board for them by Mamata Banerjee.

Associations representing Tamang Buddhists and the Scheduled Caste community are backing Independent Mahendra P. Lama, though they haven’t made an announcement to that effect.

Today, members of the All India Lepcha Association met Ahluwalia here and put forward a number of demands before him. The association is known to have a leaning towards the Morcha.

“We want our community to be included in the primitive tribe list and Lepcha villages to be converted into model villages. Integrated tribal development projects and introduction of Lepcha language in primary schools are also our key demands,” said Rinchen Lepcha, the joint secretary of the association.

Ahluwalia said the Lepcha delegation’s demands would be looked into if the BJP formed a government at the Centre.

Independent candidate Lama was seen with leaders of the Tamangs and the Schedule Caste community while he was going to submit his nomination to the Darjeeling district magistrate.

Leaders of the All India Tamang Buddhist Association said on condition of anonymity that they were supporting Lama’s candidature. “Not only our association, but other organisations (of the respective communities) are also supporting Lama’s candidature. Lama is from the hills and is a good candidate,” said a leader of the Tamang Buddhist Association.

The association for the SC community has claimed that it hasn’t taken any decision on political issues. Observers, however, said leaders of the community hadn’t been seen hobnobbing with any candidate before in the hills.

The Tamangs numbering around 2 lakh form the major chunk of the Gorkha community in the hills. Lama is a Tamang Buddhist. The Tamang Youth Association, another body of the community, had already announced that it would support Bhaichung Bhutia of Trinamul.

The observers believe the Kalimpong-based Indigenous Lepcha Tribal Association, the dominant body of the community, is likely to back Trinamul. The observation stems from the fact that the association’s demand for a development board for the Lepcha community was honoured by Mamata Banerjee last year.

The hills haven’t witnessed bonhomie between the communities and the candidates before, said the observers. “The formation of the Mayel Lyang Lepcha Development Board has somewhat led to different communities being associated with political parties. Other communities, too, started demanding similar arrangements and began cosying up to political groups. The hills hadn’t seen community leaders mixing with politicians before,” said an observer.

VIVEK CHHETRI
Source : Telegraph 


Indian Mujahideen (IM) chief arrested in Darjeeling

9:55 AM
Darjeling - Delhi police today announced the arrest of the Indian Mujahideen officiating head, Tehsin Akhtar, and linked him to the blasts at Narendra Modi’s rally in Patna last year.


Indian Mujahideen (IM) chief arrested in Darjeeling
Indian Mujahideen (IM) chief arrested in Darjeeling

The special cell of Delhi police said 23-year-old Akhtar alias Monu was arrested in Darjeeling today. But Intelligence Bureau officials in Delhi said he was detained by them a few days ago and handed over to the police after interrogation yesterday.

Special commissioner of Delhi police S.N. Srivastava contested the bureau’s claim.

The arrest of Akhtar, who the police said hailed from Darbhanga in Bihar, came days after some IM operatives were arrested in Ajmer and Jaipur on Sunday.

“Akhtar was the officiating head of the Indian Mujahideen after the arrest of the outfit’s commander Yasin Bhatkal last year. Akhtar was heading terror operations in India and was in direct touch with the Bhatkal brothers, Riyaz and Iqbal, the co-founders of the outfit said to be hiding in Pakistan,” Srivastava said.

The officer added the special cell arrested Akhtar in Naxalbari, Darjeeling, following a tip-off it received while interrogating the IM operatives arrested on Sunday.

“The special cell team arrested Akhtar after his location was disclosed by one his associates, Pakistani terrorist Zia-Ur-Rehman alias Waqas. He was arrested on Sunday in Ajmer. Akhtar was a close aide and a protégé of Yasin Bhatkal,” Srivastava said.

Delhi police had on Sunday nabbed Waqas in Ajmer. His arrest coincided with the capture of three of his associates —- Mohammed Mahruf, Mohammed Waqar Azhar and Shaquib Ansari — in Jaipur.

Srivastva said today: “Akhtar’s elevation as the IM’s India chief happened after the arrest of Yasin Bhatkal and Asadullah Akhtar alias Haddi in August 2013. They were arrested near the India-Nepal border. Akhtar had been handling all the India-based modules of the outfit. He was the key link between the IM and other splinter terror groups that have emerged from the umbrella of the Students Islamic Movement of India (Simi).”

According to police sources, Akhtar’s interrogation had revealed that he was known to Gayur Ahmad Jamali, an IM operative arrested in 2011. Jamali had allegedly introduced Akhtar to Kafeel and Yasin Bhatkal, following which Akhtar rose up the ranks and became an important member of the terror outfit.

“His (Akhtar) first assignment was to act as the carrier for Pakistan-based terrorist Adil Ajmal and to ensure that he safely crossed over to Nepal through India. His second assignment was to receive Waqas and Haddi in Kathmandu. Soon after that, all three along with Yasin Bhatkal and Adil Ajmal carried out the Jama Masjid attacks in 2010,” said a senior police officer in Delhi.

The police said Akhtar was involved in the blast in Varanasi’s Seetla Ghat, a cooker-bomb explosion outside Jama Masjid in Delhi, the serial blasts in Mumbai in 2011, the bombings in Pune in 2012 and the twin explosions in Hyderabad last year.

“After the arrest of Yasin Bhatkal and Haddi, Akhtar left Jodhpur and went to Kerala’s Munnar where Waqas was also hiding. After staying there for a few months, Akhtar went to Bihar and masterminded the Patna blasts,” the police officer added.

Source:Telegraph

TMC Baichung Bhutia liquid assets worth Rs6.52 crore

12:06 PM
TMC
Trinamool Congress candidate for Darjeeling parliamentary seat and former captain of the national football team, Baichung Bhutia, today declared liquid assets worth Rs6.52 crore via an affidavit.
TMC Baichung Bhutia liquid assets worth Rs6.52 crore
TMC Baichung Bhutia liquid assets worth Rs6.52 crore

Bhutia declared his personal cash-in-hand was worth Rs2.64 crore, while investments and savings in the form of bonds, shares, FDs, jewellery and insurance policies totaled Rs3.88 crore.

The gross current market value of his immovable assets, including landed property, is Rs13.47 crore, he says in the affidavit.

Baichung owns an Audi Q5 car worth Rs41 lakh and has landed property in Kolkata and Sikkim. His liability in the form of bank loans is Rs1.28 crore, according to the affidavit. The TMC candidate has three dependents and his wife Madhuri Tipnis Bhutia has liquid assets worth Rs3.72 crore. 

Source:PTI

Darjeeling - drama outside the DM’s office

11:27 AM
TMC
The Congress candidate for Darjeeling, Sujoy Ghatak, was accorded a rousing reception today by supporters of his rival from Trinamul, though unwittingly, when he arrived at the district magistrate’s office here to file his nomination.

Ahluwalia (in pink turban) with supporters of the Morcha, BJP and the Lok Janshakti Party after filing his nomination in Darjeeling on Monday. Picture by Suman Tamang
Ahluwalia (in pink turban) with supporters of the Morcha, BJP and the Lok Janshakti Party
after filing his nomination in Darjeeling on Monday. Picture by Suman Tamang

Ghatak was welcomed with claps from Trinamul supporters who were caught unawares in their bid to outdo the cadres of the Gorkha Janmukti Morcha.

The supporters of Trinamul and the Morcha had gathered outside the district magistrate’s office to welcome their candidates, Bhaichung Bhutia and S.S. Ahluwalia, respectively. Apart from Ghatak, Bhutia and Ahluwalia, SUCI-backed candidate Gautam Bhattacharya also submitted his papers today before district magistrate Puneet Yadav, who is also the returning officer of the Darjeeling Lok Sabha seat.

The Trinamul cadres were awaiting footballer Bhutia when they heard the slogan “Vande Matarm” from a distance. They started clapping just like the Morcha supporters had welcomed Ahluwalia an hour earlier.

As the claps grew louder, someone shouted from the Trinamul crowd: “This is not our candidate.” Ghatak, the Congress candidate, had by then finished flashing a smile with folded hands, probably surprised by the warm reception from his rival party. The Trinamul supporters could do nothing but merely laugh at the events that had just unfolded.

The drama outside the DM’s office started with a flag battle.

Around 10.30am, Trinamul supporters started gathering on the premises of the DM’s office. Even though Bhaichung was supposed to file his papers in the afternoon, the enthusiastic supporters had started flocking to the venue since morning.

Morcha supporters reached the DM’s office around 11am as Ahluwalia was slated to file his nomination within 30 minutes. Just when the Morcha supporters were gathering, Trinamul workers were seen holding aloft 10 party flags. The Morcha supporters soon managed to get 24 flags of the BJP, which fielded Ahluwalia in Darjeeling. Not to be outdone, Trinamul brought extra flags and assembled more supporters.

The Ahluwalia camp was, however, seen winning the flag battle as supporters of Ram Vilas Paswan’s Lok Janshakti Party also joined in with their flags. The Morcha flags also started to flutter outside the DM’s office.

The LJP is an ally of the BJP and its supporters were believed to have come from the plains. Interestingly, the battle of flags was fought without raising a single slogan.

When Ahluwalia came to file his nomination, the BJP-Morcha-LJP supporters merely welcomed him by claps. Nomination over, the BJP-Morcha-LJP members raised slogans trailing Ahluwalia who walked till Darjeeling town.

The venue was clear for the Trinamul candidate. Eager to show their strength and ensure a rousing welcome to Bhaichung, they lined up right up to the entrance to the DM’s office. But the claps reserved for the footballer went to Ghatak. It was around 1.45pm, when Bhaichung reached the DM’s office, accompanied by a large number of supporters.

In the battle, there were three distinct winners today.

In terms of footfall, the footballer emerged a clear winner. With three different flags to back him, Ahluwalia was the winner in the most varied flag fight. However, the overall winner seems to be Ghatak who was welcomed by not only Congress workers but also the rival’s supporters.

Unaware of the battle of flags, the candidates were seen prepared for the real battle. Soon after filing his nomination, Ahluwalia said he was “aware of the people’s aspiration and expectations”.

Asked about the opposition against division of Bengal by the BJP’s state committee, Ahluwalia said: “Wait for the manifesto and everything will be clear. Don’t jump the gun right away.”

Bhaichung, on the other hand, said: “The people of Darjeeling have supported me a lot when I was playing. Today’s support shows we will be the Number 1 both in the plains and the hills.”

Source: Telegraph

Darjeeling Bhaichung Bhutia and SS Ahluwalia filed their nomination at DM office

11:20 AM
TMC
Darjeeling: Bhaichung Bhutia and SS  Ahluwalia formally filed their nominations in the Darjeeling  DM office for the up coming Lok Sabha election 

Darjeeling Bhaichung Bhutia and SS Ahluwalia filed their nomination at DM office lok sabha
Bhaichung Bhutia as TMC candidate from Darjeeling constituency filed his nomination at Darjeeling District Magistrate office today.On the other hand Surendrajeet Singh Ahluwalia backed by GJM also filed his Nomination for the 2014 Parliamentary Elections from Darjeeling 

SS Ahluwalia, the BJP candidate being backed by the GJM, accompanied by his wife and son, was the first to file his nomination. But Darjeeling district magistrate Puneet Yadav said the papers were wrongly submitted.

TMC candidate Bhaichung Bhutia came later in the afternoon also accompanied by his wife and three children and submitted his nomination papers.

Supporters of the two candidates converged at the DM office with flags along with senior leaders, but each side ensured the other was not impeded. GJM joint assistant secretary Raju Pradhan and central committee leader DK Pradhan accompanied Ahluwalia, while North Bengal Development Department minister Gautam Deb was with Bhaichung.

After filing his papers, the BJP candidate said, "I am aware of the expectations and aspirations of the people. If elected, it will be my moral responsibility to work to fulfill their wishes".

However, he skirted questions on the statehood demand. "The biggest issue at present is that of development. Let us not jump the gun but wait for our party's election manifesto. Everything will be clear then," said Ahluwalia.

When asked to comment on BJP state president Rahul Sinha's assertion the other day about Bengal not being divided, Ahluwalia said he was not aware of it. "He is the party’s state president. What he has said and why, I don't know. I hot this information from the media just today," he claimed.

Bhaichung, on the other hand, expressed confidence of being elected as MP from Darjeeling and attributed his imminent win to the people's support. "People from both the plains and the hills have given me great response and support. They have now understood it is not money or muscle, but it is them that are the real power. And the people will definitely vote for me," he said.

The former footballer also said it was because of the TMC that peace and democracy has returned to the hills after a long time. "Our party has brought peace, democracy and development in the hills as they were all neglected. It is because of us that even GNLF chief Subash Ghisingh has been able to return to his home in Darjeeling," he asserted, adding any party willing to support him is fully welcome.

When asked to lay out his plans in the event of becoming an MP, Bhaichung said, "If elected, I will work for the development of the hills for the next five years. My focus will also be on the youths as they are our future.”


Congress candidate Sujoy Ghatak and SUCI nominee Gautam Bhattacharya also filed their nomination papers today, while CPM’s Saman Pathak and BSP’s Kakuli Majumdar filed theirs on Friday.

Source:EOI

Darjeeling Congress candidate Sujay Ghatak met supporters in Kurseong

10:26 AM
For the past couple of days, almost all the candidates for Darjeeling Constituency seat have started their respective campaigning in Darjeeling hills. Following the same trend, the Congress candidate from Darjeeling Sujay Ghatak today visited Darjeeling hills and met his supporters at the party office in Kurseong.


Darjeeling Congress candidate Sujay Ghatak met supporters in Kurseong
Darjeeling Congress candidate Sujay Ghatak

Party supporters from different places in the hills were present at the meeting today, where they discussed on different polls strategies. The supporters also briefed the Congress leaders about various problems and issues related to the hills.

Talking to the reporters, Ghatak said that the main agenda of the party is to clear the psychological differences between the plains and the hills. He said Congress has planned many development projects to be implemented in the hills. He added many heavyweight political personalities of the Congress party including Minister of State for Railways Adhir Ranjan Chowdhury is expected to visit the hills and address the public here. 

Source:EOI
 
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