Tag: Bimal Gurung

  • Calcutta HC judge releases CBI’s revision plea against Bimal Gurung’s discharge in murder case

    By PTI

    KOLKATA: Justice Tirthankar Ghosh of the Calcutta High Court on Friday released on personal grounds a revision application by the CBI against the discharge of GJM leader Bimal Gurung in the 2010 murder case of All India Gorkha League chief Madan Tamang by a sessions court.

    The CBI moved the application challenging the discharge of Gurung, the chief of a faction of the Gorkha Janmukti Morcha (GJM), by the city sessions court here in 2017 at the charge framing stage.

    Justice Ghosh, before whose court the matter appeared on Friday, released it on personal grounds and referred it back to acting Chief Justice Rajesh Bindal for assignment to a different judge.

    The sessions court had discharged Gurung from the case on August 17, 2017, rejecting the CBI’s contention that the GJM leader was involved in the conspiracy to murder Tamang, one of his political opponents in the Darjeeling hills.

    While discharging Gurung at the stage of framing of charges for trial in the case, the city court had directed that charges be framed against 47 other accused, including the GJM leader’s wife Asha and other top leaders of the party.

    Tamang was attacked with sharp weapons when he was overseeing preparations for a public meeting at Clubside in the heart of Darjeeling town on May 21, 2010.

    He was declared brought dead at the Sadar Hospital there.

    The Supreme Court had on October 8, 2013, directed transfer of hearing in the case from Darjeeling Sadar court to the city sessions court in Kolkata on a petition by Tamang’s widow Bharati.

    She had claimed that witnesses could be impacted if the trial was held in Darjeeling.

  • Bengal polls: What did BJP do for Gorkha community? asks Bimal Gurung

    By ANI
    DARJEELING: As polling got underway in North Bengal on Saturday, Gorkha Janmukti Morcha (GJM) leader Bimal Gurung asked the BJP what has the party done for the Gorkha community.

    Speaking to ANI, Gurung said, “They (BJP) do not have people’s support in Bengal. They do not have much influence on ground zero. How can they form the government? Politics is not possible through violence, vandalism and shooting. Politics should be simple.”

    “I supported BJP for 15 years but what did it do for my community? Modi had assured us and made a commitment, it has been six-seven years now but it is yet to be completed,” he added.

    Voting for the fifth phase of West Bengal assembly polls began at 7 am on Saturday amid tight security.

    Out of the 45 constituencies, where polling is being held in the fifth phase, 13 constituencies are from North Bengal including five in Darjeeling, one in Kalimpong, and seven in Jalpaiguri.

    The most dynamic political development in North Bengal during this election is the switching of camp by GJM leader Bimal Gurung from BJP to TMC. Gurung, the man who has been spearheading the Gorkha movement, helped the BJP to get a foothold in this region is now with the state’s Chief Minister Mamata Banerjee.

    North Bengal has witnessed a lot of socio-political turbulence like the Gorkhaland movement. A separate state of ‘Gorkhaland’ has been a long-standing demand of Nepali-speaking Gorkhas since 1907 on the grounds that they are culturally and ethnically different from West Bengal.

    In the current scenario, GTA is the local autonomous body in the Darjeeling hills, which is headed by the Binoy Tamang-led faction of the GJM that supports the TMC.

    Apart from the political disturbance, the adversities of tea garden workers and lack of employment opportunities are the key issues in the region.

    The BJP has promised a political solution to the Gorkha issue. It has also promised an increase in daily wages for tea workers to Rs 350.

    Caste card is also in the fray as BJP is trying to woo the ethnic and tribal population of the region with the promise of Scheduled Tribe (ST) status.

    On the other hand, Mamata Banerjee-led TMC is counting upon the development and welfare works of her government.

    The most talked-about contests are in three seats — Darjeeling, Kalimpong, and Kurseong. Here the two factions of Gorkha Janmukti Morcha (GJM) one led by Bimal Gurung and the other by his former deputy Binay Tamang are in a direct contest.

    In the Darjeeling constituency, Pemba Tshering is the candidate for GJM (Gurung) and Keshav Raj Sharma for GJM (Tamang). BJP has fielded Neeraj Zimba Tamang from the seat. Gautam Raj Rai is the CPI(M) candidate from Darjeeling.

    In these three constituencies, TMC has not fielded its candidate as GJM is backing the TMC. The GJM had won these seats in the last two Assembly elections.

  • Cooch Behar killings turning point, BJP to be routed from north Bengal: Bimal Gurung

    By PTI
    DARJEELING: Asserting that Saturdays firing by the CISF in Cooch Behar, which claimed four lives, would prove to be a “turning point” in Bengal polls, Bimal Gurung, the chief of one of the two GJM factions, claimed that the BJP would face the wrath of voters in the remaining four phases of polling in the northern part of the state.

    Gurung, in an interview, reaffirmed that “statehood is a dream nurtured by every Gorkha” living in the hills, while also noting that the TMC’s pitch for a “permanent political solution” and the overall development of Darjeeling and its adjoining areas sounds “very encouraging”.

    Lashing out at the BJP for “deceiving the Gorkha jaati for 12 years with fake promises”, Gurung, who deserted the NDA and joined hands with the TMC in October last year, said he will teach the saffron camp a “lesson for life”, with Mamata Banerjee by his side.

    “Killing of innocent people — be it by the state police or the central forces — is not acceptable. What happened in Cooch Behar on the polling day is nothing short of a genocide; the BJP would feel the heat in North Bengal. The party would be wiped out from the region,” he said.

    Four persons were killed and as many injured when the CISF opened fire in Sitalkuchi area of Cooch Behar, triggering a political storm, with the central forces claiming that shots were fired in self-defence.

    The TMC, however, termed it a “cold-blooded” murder to intimidate voters.

    “During the 2017 Gorkhaland agitation, many people were killed…The TMC subsequently faced the music in the 2019 general election when it lost all eight Lok Sabha seats in north Bengal.

    This time, the BJP is set to meet the same fate,” he asserted.

    With 54 seats spread across seven districts, north Bengal has the wherewithal to be a game-changer this election, with the BJP striving hard to hold its fort in the region and the TMC seeking to recover its lost ground amid changing political equations.

    The ruling camp in 2016 state polls had bagged 25 seats in north Bengal.

    But the subsequent general election in 2019 changed the course of the wind in favour of the BJP, which won seven of the eight Lok Sabha seats and stayed ahead in at least 35 assembly segments.

    “The BJP managed to do well in north Bengal because we had supported the party in 2019. It bagged the Darjeeling seat thrice since 2009. Over the years, however, Gorkhas have realised that the saffron camp was only deceiving them with false promises. This election, it will get a befitting lesson,” Gurung, who holds sway over at least 15 assembly seats and 11 Gorkha communities, said.

    Justifying his decision to change camp last year, he said, “We have full faith in Mamata Banerjee; she has promised to bring about a permanent political solution in the Hills.”

    Stressing that the demand for Gorkhaland will always be the “most pertinent” issue for his outfit, Gurung, however, said that the overall development of the infrastructure in the region tops his agenda list for now.

    “The mainstay of the Hill people is tea, timber and tourism. All three industries have been badly hit due to the COVID-19 pandemic. People now want jobs, development and a better standard of living,” he said.

    Gurung had gone into hiding after the June 2017 clashes in Darjeeling.

    More than 120 cases were filed against him, including a few under the Unlawful Activities (Prevention) Act.

    The agitation led to a split in the GJM, with Binay Tamang, his deputy, emerging as the leader of one of the factions.

    Making a dramatic appearance in Kolkata in October last year, he quit the BJP-led NDA and aligned with the TMC, underscoring that the saffron party has “failed to find a sustainable solution” for the Hills — which time and again had witnessed major unrest over demand for a separate state.

    The Mamata Banerjee camp, which already enjoyed the support of the Tamang faction, welcomed Gurung in its fold, with her government apprently going slow on the criminal cases filed against him.

    The ruling party has left three constituencies in north Bengal for its “friends from the hills”, and both the factions of the GJM are contesting the seats as independents.

    Asked if his differences with Binay Tamang would have an impact on the electorate, he said, “I don’t have anything to prove anymore. Despite being in hiding, I have assured BJP’s victory in 2019. The people are with me.”

    “If he (Tamang) is not loyal to the Gorkha people and me, how will he be loyal to Mamata Banerjee? People gave him an apt reply for his misdoings and he lost in by-polls in the Darjeeling assembly seat.

    The BJP, with my support, secured the seat,” he said.

    The Gorkha leader, however, clarified that he did not rub shoulders with Mamata Banerjee out of fear or desperation to return to his homeland.

    “Unlike what some people have claimed, I did not align with the TMC to get rid of the police cases. The cases that were filed against me are sub-judice,” he said.

    Assembly elections in all seven districts of north Bengal are being held in five phases — between April 10 and April 29.