Showing posts with label Mangar Development Board. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Mangar Development Board. Show all posts

Development boards inject identity politics into Hills political cauldron

1:42 PM
Darjeeling/Kalimpong: The creation of Hill boards for the uplift of ethnic communities—Lepchas, Tamangs, Sherpas, Bhutias, Mangars and Rais—has added a new dimension to the effervescent politics in the Hills.

Though the GJM, which runs the GTA, views the boards as an attempt to fracture its support base in the Hills, fuelling identity politics, the move seems to have won Mamata Banerjee many admirers for championing the cause of the marginalized. “What is wrong if the Hills people who have been deprived of benefit for years get something? The indigenous communities saw refugees receive facilities but they never got anything. Though it led to some disquiet, it did not trigger a clash. Now, the state is finally giving what was long overdue. It will definitely have political implications, both in short and long term,” said writer Nanda Hakim.

The announcement of the Lepcha board in August 2011 opened the floodgates with similar development boards being set up for the Tamangs, Sherpas, Bhutias, Mangars and Rais, who account for nearly 10 lakh people in the Hills and elsewhere. Two more boards are in the line, for Limbus and Newars. All these boards receive funds from the state for the development of facilities for the communities.

Lyang Song Tamsang, chairman of West Bengal Mayel Lyang Lepcha Development Board that has received Rs 86 crore in 2013-2015, says they received a bigger boost in the past three years than in the earlier 60. “The funds have helped build 3,000 homes for poor Lepcha families, and 40 Lepcha night-schools are now housed in pucca buildings. We will convert the remaining 20 into pucca structures and add another 20 night schools by next year,” said Tamsang.

Lepchas learn their language as well as math and English from British and Amercian teachers at these schools. The money has also initiated a stream beautification project. As most Lepcha families live in remote hamlets, adjacent to streams and dependent on agriculture, the project is aimed at providing them with a source of clean water to drink and irrigate their crops.

“The state tried to fulfil a long-standing demand for introducing Lepcha language in primary schools and appointed para-teachers but the GTA went to court, saying it was an interference. Those para-teachers now teach the language at the night schools,” said Tamsang, hinting at the underlying friction caused by the boards.

The West Bengal Bhutia Development Board is yet to run into any hurdle. But board chairman Palden D Bhutia, a former Darjeeling Municipality chief (1999-2004), remains wary. They have spent Rs 10 crore on 500 homes for needy Bhutia families. But the money has also created envy. “The amount that the boards are getting isn’t magic. Even earlier, development funds came but no one knows where it disappeared. Now that it is coming directly to the community, the opportunity to siphon off has ceased,” he said.

Political observers say Bhutias, Lepchas, Tamangs and Sherpas will be favourably disposed towards Mamata. While the communities may not vote directly for Trinamool, a good section could vote for Harka Bahadur Chhetri’s Jan Andolan Party (JAP), which has Mamata’s backing.
“It will be good to receive the support of various communities,” said the JAP candidate from Kalimpong, which houses several board offices.

But Nepali Sahitya Sammelan member S K Giri questioned the future: “Owing to Mamata’s interest, the boards have been set up like para clubs. If the government changes, what will happen to the board that have no constitutional legality?”

Tamsang said board officials have requested the state to make the boards statutory and incorporate them in Government Act instead of Societies Act.



Via TOI

Mamata Banerjee announced Mangar Development Board

12:14 PM
Writes Rajeev Ravidas

Chief minister Mamata Banerjee today went back on her word and announced a development board for Mangars, the first non-tribal Gorkha community from the hills to be given such a cultural platform.

The Lepchas, Tamangs, Sherpas and Bhutias, who have development boards, are all tribals.

"The Mangars want a development board, so do the Rais and the Limbus. I have given it to the Mangars," she said at an event organised by the Lepcha Development Board at the Mela Grounds in Kalimpong. Immediately after her announcement, the members of the Mangar community in the crowd of over 10,000 consisting mostly of the Lepchas started dancing.

"This has opened the doors of opportunity for the members of our community. We will forever be grateful to the chief minister for giving us this board," said Navin Thapa, the secretary of the Nava Mangar Association.
Mangar community celebrating in traditional attire in Kalimpong following the announcement of 'Mangar Development Board' by CM Mamata Banerjee in Kalimpong
Mangar community celebrating in traditional attire in Kalimpong following the announcement of
'Mangar Development Board' by CM Mamata Banerjee in Kalimpong 
The Gorkha Janmukti Morcha is against the chief minister's decision to form the development boards and Bimal Gurung has said this was an effort to divide the people of the hills.

Morcha general secretary Roshan Giri said: "This is part of her divide-and-rule policy. If her intentions are sincere, she ought to make boards for all Gorkha communities."

The chief minister went back her word of not forming any more boards, which she had said in Darjeeling on August 25. Her change of heart, it appears, has come about because of the enthusiastic response she received from the beneficiary communities of the earlier tribal bodies during her current visit to the hills.

"I want development to take place in the hills. If we indulge only in politics, the people will suffer," she said while lauding the Lepcha board for delivering on development.

In an oblique reference to the Morcha, she said the politics of agitation will not bring any good. "Don't agitate, it will hurt Darjeeling.... If you want to talk, the doors are always open. What is needed is not speeches, but development," she said in a mix of Hindi and broken Nepali.

Yesterday, at another event in Kalimpong, people had clapped when Mamata had said she would not let go of the hills, reiterating her stand that she was against the bifurcation of Bengal.

Today, the chief minister also announced some sops for the Lepchas and other communities. The significant among them was the hike in the annual budget of the Lepcha board from Rs 30 crore to Rs 35 crore and construction of a building in Calcutta for Lepchas visiting the state capital and another one for the people of the hills visiting Siliguri.

Source Telegraph

 
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