[vc_row][vc_column][vc_column_text]Decision to suspend Gurung and his confidantes came a day before Bengal chief minister Mamata Banerjee’s scheduled all-party meet to discuss Darjeeling situation
In a new twist to the continuing intrigue around the political movement seeking complete autonomy, even statehood, for the Gorkhaland region of Bengal, Bimal Gurung – the face of the statehood agitation for years – was suspended by his one-time protégé Binay Tamang, on Monday, as president of the Gorkha Janmukti Morcha (GJM).
Ironically, Tamang’s decision to suspend his mentor came on a day when the Supreme Court passed an order in Gurung’s favour, restraining the Mamata Banerjee-led Bengal government from taking any “coercive action” against the now-ousted GJM chief. Gurung has been absconding for over six months following a slew of criminal cases being slapped against him by the state administration. Besides Gurung, Tamang – with the help of his confidantes in the GJM central committee – also suspended at least nine other senior party functionaries, including Gurung’s wife Asha and party general secretary Roshan Giri.
The suspensions have been announced for a period of six months and Tamang claimed that they decision had been taken in accordance with the party constitution since Gurung and his aides had “been inactive and in absentia” for over six months.
Tamang, who has been embroiled in a brinkmanship war with Gurung to take control of his party’s cadres and has been backed by the Mamata Banerjee-led state administration in his efforts, also got himself named as the GJM president while he named his close aide, Anit Thapa as the party general secretary in place of Giri.
In a statement issued from an undisclosed location, Giri slammed Tamang’s ‘coup’, calling the suspensions “illegal” and asserting that Binay Tamang and Anit Thapa had no authority to take decisions for the GJM because they had been expelled from the party in September (by the GJM faction led by Bimal Gurung).
The developments within the GJM came a day before Mamata Banerjee was scheduled to hold her all-party meet to discuss the prevailing situation in the Darjeeling hills, the epicenter of the Gorkhaland agitation, which are still recovering from the over 100-day-long ‘bandh’ called by the GJM which had ended only last month.
Gurung’s faction will not attend the talks convened by Banerjee. However, Tamang – the newly appointed GJM-chief who is known to have a good working relationship with the state government – will attend the talks. Tamang was appointed by Banerjee as interim chairman of the Gorkhaland Territorial Administration (GTA) in September after the GJM under Gurung had dismissed the semi-autonomous body for civic administration as a complete failure. Tamang’s appointment as the head of the GTA, along with his confidante Anit Thapa being named as the body’s vice chairman, has been viewed as Banerjee’s successful attempt at dividing the GJM down the middle and thereby weakening the separate statehood demand for Gorkhaland, something that has kept the Darjeeling hills in a restive state for years.[/vc_column_text][/vc_column][/vc_row]