Bharti and her son finally met the Chief Minister last week
In the past two years, Bharti Tamang had sent at least seven letters to West Bengal Chief Minister Mamata Banerjee seeking an appointment and pleading for a fair investigation into her husband and hill leader Madan Tamang's murder. Not once did the CM get back, till last week.
The Chief Minister's Office (CMO) called up Bharti in Darjeeling on February 4 and asked her to come to Kolkata immediately to meet Mamata. "This is urgent," she was told. Accompanied by her son Sanjog, she met the CM at the Writers' Buildings on February 6. At the meeting, Mamata reportedly expressed regret at not having met them earlier, and said she had committed a "blunder" in extending a hand of friendship to the Gorkha Janmukti Morcha (GJM). The family, which has been complaining about feeling insecure in Darjeeling, was also provided security after the meeting ended.
While the Tamangs refused to talk, the closed-door meeting by all accounts revolved around the Tamang murder case.
And the reason is easy to see: As the relationship between the GJM and Trinamool Congress worsens, the case has become one of the most important tools and political bargaining points in Darjeeling's scheme of things.
Any proper investigation in the case is likely to lead to the top GJM leadership. So far, the Trinamool Congress regime has ensured this doesn't happen. Despite the FIR naming several leaders of the party and despite telephone call intercepts indicating their hand in the murder, they have not even been questioned; the state government has not handed over the transcript and the recordings of the conversation between the alleged assailants and senior GJM leaders to the CBI despite repeated requests; and the CBI, which had asked the government's approval to include a CID officer, Ardhendu Pahari, in the chargesheet, is yet to receive any response. The prime accused in the case, Nicole, had fled from Pahari's custody.
However, the case isn't the only weapon the CM is wielding against the GJM, with whom relations have soured over the separate statehood demand. The state Cabinet recently cleared the Lepcha Development Council. Lepchas and Buddhists constitute about 20 per cent of the hill population and are listed as Scheduled Tribes. Lepchas are also the original inhabitants of Darjeeling hills. Notwithstanding that the gambit could prove disastrous for the Darjeeling hills, which has a large number of SC/ST groups, Mamata is obviously hoping caste politics will help her cut the GJM say in the hills.
"We have been demanding the council for several years. It went unheard. But now, with political interests (in mind), the government has approved the Lepcha Development Council. The government and and the political parties of the hill are doing unnecessary politics over our identity and our lives," said Bhupinder Lepcha, convener of the Lepcha Rights Movement.
The GJM has called a strike protesting against the formation of the Lepcha council.
GJM general secretary Roshan Giri said, "CM Mamata Banerjee has started playing with the emotions of the people of the hills. She is trying to apply the divide and rule policy on us... There is no provision for setting up of the council under the GTA (Gorkhaland Territorial Administration) Act and it cannot be set up."
That may not be the only development council on Mamata's plate either as she takes on the GJM. At a meeting with a section of the Adivasi Vikash Parishad last week, the CM said she was willing to explore the idea of an Adivasi Development Council as well, in the Dooars and Terai region.
A section of the Adivasis in the foothills of Darjeeling had earlier aligned with the GJM in the hope of being a stakeholder in the region's development under the GTA. However, Gurung has suffered loss of credibility with them for failing to include 400 mouzas of Terai and Dooars region under the GTA.
Tribal leader John Barla who met Mamata said: "She asked me about the problems of Terai and Dooars region. We demanded a Terai and Dooars development council and autonomy in the area for development of tribal people. She agreed to support us."
In toughening her stand against the GJM and its call for a separate state, Mamata may also be sending a signal to the neighbouring areas before the scheduled panchayat polls.
Such a stand is bound to get her votes in the polls in several districts bordering Darjeeling, such as Coochbehar, Jalpgiguri, Siliguri and Dinajpur.
The Madan Tamang caseMay 2010: Top leader Madan Tamang of the Akhil Bharatiya Gorkha League, the only dissenting voice against Bimal Gurung and his men in the Darjeeling hills, is hacked to death allegedly by GJM activists during a public meeting. Tamang was addressing a public meeting, defying a ban imposed by the GJM.
August 2010: Nicole Tamang, one of the prime accused, flees from CID custody. He is still at large.
August 2010: CID files a chargesheet naming 30 people and listing 61 witnesses. Key GJM leaders named in the FIR left out of the chargesheet.
January 2011: State government hands over the case to the CBI following a petition by Tamang's wife Bharti in the Calcutta High Court.
August 2011: The CBI files a supplementary chargesheet, implicating Dipen Maley, spokesperson of the GJM's youth wing, Gorkha Janmukti Yuva Morcha. Maley is arrested. Gurung fields Maley in the GTA election as a candidate.
November 2011: CBI informer and a witness in the case, Naveen Gurung, is murdered in Darjeeling.
December 2011: Dil Kumar Rai, named by the CID in the chargesheet, is killed in Singla on the West Bengal-Sikkim border.
September 2012: With all the nine arrested persons in the case granted bail in 2012, Bharti moves the Supreme Court, urging that an SIT comprising "officers of impeccable integrity" be set up to conduct a probe.
February 18: The Supreme Court is expected to deliver its verdict.
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