Dear Friends:

This piece is from the New York Times today(28 03 2012). We're lucky it is not 
blocked by the advertisers of  the paper.


-bhuban


A Conversation With: Gorkha Leader Bimal Gurung

By ANURADHA SHARMA

Kundan Yolmo
From left to right: Dinesh Trivedi, member Trinamool Congress party, Mamata 
Banerjee, chief minister West Bengal, Bimal Gurung, leader Gorkha Janmukti 
Morcha and Home Minster P. Chidambaram, at the signing of the Gorkha 
Territorial Administration agreement in West Bengal, in this July 18, 2011 file 
photo.

Bimal Gurung has been a major force in the movement to carve out a separate 
state for Nepali-speaking Indians, or Gorkhas, from West Bengal, since 2007.
Mr. Gurung, 48, was one of the dreaded aides of Gorkha National Liberation 
Front chief Subhash Ghisingh during the the first Gorkhaland agitation of the 
late 1980s. He formed a separate party, the Gorkha Janmukti Morcha, in October 
2007 and overthrew and ousted Mr. Ghisingh from the hills. Mr. Gurung’s party 
has launched an agitation, not armed but marked by sporadic spurts of violence, 
 over the longstanding demand of a separate Gorkhaland state for the people of 
Darjeeling Hills.
For now Mr. Gurung has to make do with the autonomous Gorkhaland Territorial 
Administration, or GTA. The government notification for setting up GTA was made 
on March 14 of this year. The new “administration”, which replaces the 
Darjeeling Gorkha Hill Council, is a statutory autonomous body of mostly 
elected members who will govern 59 departments including education, 
agriculture, cottage and small scale industries. It has executive and financial 
powers, but no legislative powers. The tripartite GTA deal of July 18,2011 had 
capped four years of unrest in Darjeeling area. 
The GTA’s creation agreement was one of the first trophies for West Bengal 
Chief Minister Mamata Banerjee. Elections to the 45 constituencies of the GTA 
are scheduled for this summer. Mr. Gurung also wants the contiguous areas of 
the Terai and Dooars, inhabited in part by tribal people, to be added to the 
GTA’s territory. A 10-member joint verification committee headed by former 
Allahabad Chief Justice Shyamal Sen is looking into the demand. Should new 
areas be added, five members would be nominated from there.
India Ink met Mr. Gurung at a north Kolkata guest house on Saturday, soon after 
he met with Chief Minister Banerjee:

Anuradha Sharma
Bimal Gurung during the interview in Kolkata on Saturday.

Q.
You come from a very humble background. You were one of the militant leaders of 
the Gorkhaland movement of late ‘80s. Today you are carrying the hopes of 
thousands of Indian Nepalis. How do you describe your personal political 
journey?
A.
I was born to a very poor family, so poor that having finished one meal, we 
would wonder when the next one would be. I have done odd jobs ever since my 
early days and so could not acquire good education. I became a part of the 
violent agitation spurred by the dream of Gorkhaland. I was young like all 
other youths who took part in that agitation. There was no one to guide us, to 
tell us that the gun is of no use, that you should be holding the pen instead. 
Neither did the political leadership seem to care. And in the end after all the 
sacrifices, they sold the Gorkhaland dream.
Q.
Why did it take you so long to oppose Subhash Ghisingh?
A.
It was the politics of fear that he resorted to. The general feeling the people 
in the hills had was they would be killed if they opposed him. In 2005, I first 
said at a public meeting in my village (Tukvar) that we want Gorkhaland and not 
the Sixth Schedule status that Subhash Ghisingh was rooting for.  My family 
members and friends got very worried for my safety and would ask me to keep a 
low profile. But in 2007, when Subhash Ghisingh brought home a Sixth Schedule 
status, I parted ways with him and formed my own party on October 7 and started 
a new agitation. This agitation is non-violent, intellectual.
Q.
Your detractors accuse you of muzzling opposition voices in the Hills?
A.
There is no opposition, actually, just a few opposition leaders without 
practically any supporters. The so called leaders kept quiet all the time when 
they had an opportunity to speak for the Hills people, for Gorkhaland. Today, I 
and our party have brought our Gorkhlanad agitation this far, fromsadak to 
sansad (street to the Parliament). It does not suit them to now pretend to be 
standing up for the people and raising the Gorkhaland demand. Do you think the 
people will be convinced by them?
Q.
What role did Prashant Tamang, the Gorkha winner of Indian Idol, play in your 
party’s success? While Mr Ghisingh chose not to engage with the singer, you 
organized fan clubs and canvased for him in the talent hunt. Did that help you 
build a ready base of supporters?
A.
Prashant’s victory was a matter of our pride. We had backed him with all that 
we had. Besides, he got the whole Gorkha community united. He stirred 
nationalism in the hearts of the people. That helped the movement.
Q.
The Gorkhaland Territorial Administration is now a reality. What next?
A.
Gorkhaland, of course. The GTA is only the preparation for the separate state 
of Gorkhaland.

Rupak De Chowdhuri/Reuters
The demand for a separate state of Gorkhaland scribbled across a billboard, 
during a strike called by the Gorkha Janmukti Morcha in Siliguri, West Bengal, 
in this June 10, 2008 file photo.

Q.
Do you see that happening anytime soon?
A.
Oh yes. In six months (from the formation of GTA), or a year maybe. I will not 
let it delay further.
Q.
But you had given such a deadline earlier too. You had said that you’d achieve 
Gorkhaland by March 2010.
A.
I was misled. I trusted some wrong people and made mistakes.
Q.
Such as..
A.
(Smiles)
Q.
The chief minister, whose state government is signatory to the GTA agreement, 
has categorically spoken against the creation of a separate state.
A.
Goji-ko ho? (Is it anyone’s personal property?) So many states have been 
created in India since Independence. Why should only the Gorkhas not be allowed 
to have their state? Nothing short of statehood is a complete solution to the 
problems of the Gorkhas, be it identity or development. The geopolitical 
situation of the region logically demands a separate state.
Q.
You had been vehemently opposing elections to the GTA until the issue of 
addition of new areas is resolved. The agreement reached at the Saturday 
meeting with chief minister does not promise anything new. What made you change 
your mind?
A.
At the meeting with the chief minister, we adopted a resolution that the 
high-powered committee will submit its report on the inclusion of additional 
areas by early June. The chief minister has given us the assurance that the 
panel will complete work within the new time-frame. Creating an impasse of any 
sort is not our idea. We want to achieve our goals democratically through 
dialogue.
Q.
What if the panel, which has already missed a deadline (January 2012), is not 
able to submit its findings within the stipulated time?
A.
It is the responsibility of the government to uphold the agreement. We will see 
what we can do when the time comes.
Q.
What if no new area is included?
A.
That should not happen if the committee does its work independently without any 
pressure from the government or other forces. We have given to them a list of 
199 contiguous mouzas (villages in the revenue district) each in the Dooars 
(foothills) and Terai (outer foothills) region which are dominated by Gorkhas 
and if a proper study is done by the panel, it will be found out that all of 
them are entitled to be included in the GTA.
Q.
But aren’t many in those areas, mainly from the tribal population, opposed to 
the idea of joining the GTA?
A.
Not really. Only some of them have been instigated against us by outside forces.
Q.
Who are they?
A.
They could be anyone, the government, the Communist Party of India (Marxist), 
the Congress, anyone opposed to the GTA and our Gorkhaland dream. GTA is not 
just for Gorkhalis.  It is for everyone. The tribal areas, which have always 
suffered neglect at the hands of the government, will only stand to gain. We 
have big plans for tribal welfare.
Q.
Do you have a road map for the development of Darjeeling hills? What will be 
the focus areas of the GTA?
A.
Yes, we have elaborate plans for development in the hills, of bringing back the 
lost glory of Darjeeling. Education is our top-most priority. Education was the 
worst hit sector during the violent Gorkhaland agitation of the ’80s. Once upon 
a time we had some of India’s best schools and colleges.
Look at what the agitation and 22 years of Subhash Ghisingh’s rule has done! It 
has set our hills back by 40 years.
We will also focus on industry and employment generation. Unemployment is a 
major problem with our youths.
Q.
In a break from tradition, Ms. Banerjee did not nominate a single hill 
candidate for polls in the Rajya Sabha, or upper house of Parliament. What do 
you think about that?
A.
Absolutely disheartening. This is an indication of the government’s 
step-motherly attitude toward the hill people. Even under the Left Front rule 
the tradition had it that there would be at least one Rajya Sabha member from 
the Darjeeling hills.
Q.
But you are not boycotting the Rajya Sabha polls as you had threatened to do 
earlier.
A.
No. We have expressed our hurt to the chief minister. At this moment we do not 
want to enter into an altercation with the government over that.
Q.
Do you still believe the Trinamool government is better than the former Left 
Front government?
A.
Yes. Mamata Banerjee as a chief minister feels strongly for the hills. She 
played an active role in making the GTA come through. But she is a political 
leader and her political interests tend to go against the interest of the 
people of the hills.
Q.
Why is it that your deputy, Roshan Giri (general secretary), and not you, who 
signs on all official agreements with the government, including the GTA?
A.
I will sign only on a separate Gorkhaland state agreement.
(The interview has been condensed and lightly edited)



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