GJMM to stay away from Sen Committee proceedings
24 February 2012
statesman news service
SILIGURI, 24 FEB: Apparently wilting under combined
onslaught made by several parties and outfits, the Gorkha Jan Mukti Morcha
(GJMM) has decided that the party members of the Shymal Sen Committee would stay
away from its proceedings when it would start crucial deliberations of the
emotive land transfer issue.
A member of the committee and a senior GJMM
leader, Mr LB Pariyar, said this over phone from Kolkata after the hearing
involving all the parties concerned was concluded.
Notably, several parties,
including the CPI-M and the radical anti-GJMM outfit, Bangla O Bangla Bhasha
Banchao Committee (BOBBBC) caviled over the matter, saying that the committee
had been reduced to a farce with the active involvement of one of the parties
concerned in the committee’s decision-making process. There are four GJMM
members in the committee.
It was learnt from those who participated in
today’s hearing that when pressed on the issue, the chairman, retired justice,
Mr Shyamal Sen said the GJMM members were not participating in the committee’s
day-to-day proceedings.
Mr Pariyar said: “We insisted on our inclusion when
the committee was being conceived. The Centre and state government acceded to
our proposal. But, to be on the right side of the vexed matter, we have decided
to stay away from the proceedings of the committee when the crucial
decision-making process would begin around our land demand involving about 400
moujas across Terai-Dooars.”
Terming the outcome of today’s general meeting
as favouring the status quo ante, he said the committee would sit again after 15
March to take a final decision on the survey of land.
Meanwhile, upping ante
regarding the emotive issue at the meeting, the senior RSP leader and Alipurduar
MP, Mr Manohar Tirkey, said the state government’s decision to constitute the
high power committee was itself a provocation given the multi-ethnic character
of the concerned region.
“We asked Mr Sen not to lend credence to what the
ABAVP renegades are saying on the matter. They are GJMM hirelings with no
credibility left with the constituency they claim to represent,” he said. The
ABAVP president, Mr Birsa Tirkey, argued that the land concerned under
Integrated Tribal Development Project could not be bartered away without
violating the constitutional canons. BOBBBC president, Dr Mukunda Majumdar said
they had placed their argument against the ‘GJMM land-grabbing conspiracy’.
It will take months for Darj water project to be over
DARJEELING,
24 FEB: The Darjeeling drinking water project, officially scheduled to be
completed next month, will take months to complete, said the Darjeeling
municipality chairman, Mr Amar Singh Rai. The statement stands at variance with
the assurances given by public health engineering department officials, who said
the project would be completed within the scheduled time at a meting held at
Writers’ Buildings in Kolkata recently.
Mr Rai and Darjeeling MLA Trilok
Dewan visited the drinking water project sites today. They slammed the PHE
department for sloth in the project implementation. They visited the intake
point located at Balason and the intermediate point at College Valley on the
outskirts of Darjeeling to judge the veracity of the PHE assurances. Mr Rai said
the PHE officials would find it difficult to meet the deadline. “It looks
impossible that the process of pumping water up to Sinchel Lake would be
completed in a month. On the positive side, the work of laying the pipelines up
to the lake has been completed. However, the mere intake of water from the river
is not enough. The second stage that involves pumping water from the intake
point and then taking the same to the Sinchel Lake would take at least 4-6
months from now as the process is under construction,” he said. Mr Dewan said
the work was far from being completed. “This is surprising, given the fact that
the work began way back in 2006. We would be glad if the PHE meets the deadline.
However, we are doubtful about its accomplishment,” he said. The PHE engineering
officials, however, said the process would be completed in two to three
weeks.
dipen pradhan