Darjeeling turns into battleground as GJM calls indefinite bandh : The Tribune India

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Darjeeling turns into battleground as GJM calls indefinite bandh

DARJEELING: Hurling petrol bombs and stones, Gorkhaland supporters on Thursday fought pitched battles with police, who broke up protests, bursting teargas shells and baton-charging violent crowds, plunging Darjeeling hills into deeper turmoil.

Darjeeling turns into battleground as GJM calls indefinite bandh

Superintendant of Darjeeling police Aklilesh Chaturbedi (L), holds a crossbow recovered after a raid at the GJM office in Darjeeling on June 15. AFP



Darjeeling/Kolkata/New Delhi, June 15

Hurling petrol bombs and stones, Gorkhaland supporters on Thursday fought pitched battles with police, who broke up protests, bursting teargas shells and baton-charging violent crowds, plunging Darjeeling hills into deeper turmoil.

The Gorkha Janmukti Morcha (GJM), meanwhile, called an indefinite shutdown after police raided premises connected to its chief Bimal Gurung and some other leaders.

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The outfit had earlier called a shutdown of the offices of the state government and Gorkhaland Territorial Administration (GTA), which its controls.

The Centre today rushed an additional 400 paramilitary personnel to Darjeeling to help the local administration restore peace. These are in addition to around 1000 personnel, including 200 women, already stationed there, a Home Ministry official said in New Delhi.

GJM supporters surrounded a police contingent at Patlebas when it was returning after a series of raids on premises connected with Gurung, whose separatist campaign is escalating fast after it joined forces with arch rival Gorkha National Liberation front (GNLF) two days ago, and attacked them.

GNLF, an ally of the Trinamool Congress, had yesterday snapped its ties with West Bengal’s ruling party, giving a fillip to the agitation for a separate state of Gorkhaland.

“They (GJM) threw stones, hurled petrol bombs and fired on the police,” S N Gupta, an IG rank officer who has been tasked by the state government with handling the volatile situation in Darjeeling, told reporters.

Gupta and two other senior West Bengal officers are camping in town to ensure the situation does not spiral out of control.

A media vehicle was also set ablaze by the protesters.

Chief Minister Mamata Banerjee told reporters in Kolkata, “We want peace in the hills. There is peace in Bengal. If anybody violates law, the administration will take action. Law will take its own course”.

“There was peace in the hills. A few leaders are doing goondagiri (hooliganism). But one cannot do politics with guns and bombs. We will curb their violent agitation,” she later said at a police event in Kolkata.

“We are with the people of the hills. A conspiracy was hatched to disturb peace there. We will not allow this,” she said, adding “we are ready to shed blood, but will not allow peace to be disturbed in the hills.”

There were reports of clashes between police and protesters from several places, as they threw stones at each other. Baton-wielding policemen were seen chasing away the agitators and bursting teargas shells to break up protests.

Earlier in the day, police seized more than 300 weapons, including pickaxes, bows and arrows, explosives, night vision binoculars and cash during raids on premises connected with Gurung, sparking a call by the separatist group for an indefinite shutdown in Darjeeling hills at the peak of the tourist season.

The separatist stir in the hills, known the world over for producing aromatic tea, is fast turning into a major political headache for the Mamata Banerjee government and is likely to cripple the tourism industry, critical to the region’s economy.

The developments came a day after Gurung declared the GJM’s campaign will not stop until a separate Gorkhaland state has been created. He has asked tourists to avoid visiting Darjeeling.  — PTI

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