The Himalayan Beacon

News, views and insights from Gorkhas World Over! A Community Blog by Barun Roy

“GJM ready for talks in New Delhi” Roshan Giri

Posted by barunroy on June 20, 2008

BY BARUN ROY [A BEACON ONLINE EXCLUSIVE]

Darjeeling: Gorkha Janmukti Morcha said it was prepared to hold talks with the West Bengal government in Delhi and not in Kolkata. “We are not prepared to go to Kolkata for the discussions however, we are open to talks with the state government in Delhi, in the presence of a representative from the central government,” Roshan Giri, the General Secretary of the Gorkha Janmukti Morcha said.

Meanwhile, an indefinite shutdown called by the GJM entered its fifth day today, paralysing life in the Darjeeling Hills. With rains continuing to lash, Darjeeling Hills experienced intermittent power cuts.

The campaign has revived debate within political parties on smaller states. Each political party has worked out its own logic for supporting or resisting demands for smaller states.The Bharatiya Janata Party (BJP) favours splitting up most states for better governance while the Congress prefers not to have a fixed position on the issue.The Communist Party of India (Marxist) is against smaller states. But the Communist Party of India (CPI), favours it though not in the case of every state. For the parties, it is a matter of political expediency, political analyst G V L Narasimha Rao said. The BJP actively campaigned for the new state of Jharkhand because it led to, as was widely known, curbing the influence of the Rashtriya Janata Dal (RJD) of Lalu Prasad Yadav who held sway in Bihar.

“The BJP supported the Jharkhand movement to expand its political influence. But the BJP would resist any move to split up Gujarat where it is so powerful,” Rao said.

Senior Congress leader M Veerappa Moily added: “There is no point recklessly dividing states for political expediency. The Congress does not have an ideological stand on the issue.” But for all practical purposes, the Congress is against the creation of smaller states though many within its own ranks are supporting the separation of Telangana from Andhra Pradesh. “Reckless division of states will have a cascading effect and states may eventually end up being divided along caste lines,” Moily, who was until recently a die hard supporter of Telangana said.

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