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Thursday, August 5, 2010

WB GOVT broadly agreees on Interim Council in Darjeeling Hills...

PTI, Kolkata, Aug 05 : The West Bengal government has broadly agreed on the Centre''s draft proposal to set up an interim council in Darjeeling, replacing the Darjeeling Gorkha Hill Council which runs the administration in the hills, Home Secretary Samar Ghosh said today. With the Centre keen on the interim arrangement in Darjeeling, the state government has held talks with political parties other than the GJM to elicit their views in the run up to the next round of tripartite talks on August 17.
The Centre has so far been speaking only to the Gorkha Janmukti Morcha (GJM). Ghosh said the political parties were told to submit their views in writing before August 6, which would be communicated to the Centre by August 9.
Setting up an interim council required legislation, which needed time and a session in the House. It could even be done through ordinance to save time, he said.
The non-GJM parties in the hills have opposed an interim arrangement and demanded restoration of law and order and the democratic process first. The GJM, which has been spearheading a movement in the Darjeeling hills for a separate state of Gorkhaland, has now settled for an interim council which should also have under its jurisdiction the Siliguri and Dooars and the Terai in the plains in neighbouring Jalpaiguri district.
The DGHC at present only administers the three hill subdivisions of Darjeeling district -- Darjeeling, Kurseong and Kalimpong -- and not Siliguri subdivision in the plains. "The area is not a major issue for the government," Ghosh added.
KalimNews: "All DGHC Offices will observe strike from 6th August for an indefinite period " announced Bimal Gurung, GJMM Chief, "however" he added, "Education Department Offices will remain open on Fridays". 
Meanwhile a report states that Center is not keen on going through the proposed draft submitted by GJMM.It has made up its mind to implement the 19 point draft of the proposed GAA with some minor and less complicated modifications, if proposed by the State or the Morcha.  At the same time the State Government is ready is ready to issue  ordinance of Interim setup to save the time.
Hill soccer mania to reach climax on I-Day
Rajeev Ravidas, TT, Kalimpong, Aug. 5: A little over a month after the World Cup, football fever is expected to reach a crescendo again in Kalimpong when the finals of five tournaments, including the Independence Cup, will be kicked off in mid-August.
Football, more than cricket, continues to remain the most popular sport in the hills, and August is the month when the soccer season reaches climax in every nook and cranny of the district.
In Kalimpong, the climax comes in a span on 48 hours on August 15 and 16. The five tournaments — Independence Cup, Mini Tournament, C Division Tournament, Inter-school Tournament and Girls Football Tournament — are all conducted by the Kalimpong Sports Association (KSA).
While the mini, C division and the inter-school tournaments have begun, the girls’ soccer meet will start after August 10 and the the Independence Cup will commence from Saturday.
“While the finals of the Independence Cup and the mini tournament will be held on August 15, the C division, girls and inter-school finals will be played the following day on August 16,” said Urgen Mini Lama, the KSA president.
The two-day football fest is in keeping with the town’s unique tradition of celebrating Independence Day for an extended period that sometimes stretches up to three days.
Independence Day celebration in Kalimpong without football is a mundane affair. “Yes, football is a major part of the Independence Day celebrations. People from far and wide come here to watch the matches and generally regale in the festival-like atmosphere that prevails those two days,” said Neel Kamal Chhetri, a columnist born and based here.
Lama said in the days gone-by even the Chogyals of Sikkim used to send their football teams — Sikkim Guards and Kumar Sporting — and personally come to attend the matches. “We at the KSA want to keep the football tradition of our town alive and kicking. Despite not having adequate resources, we still invite teams from outside to unable our youngsters to get exposures,” Lama added.
This year, seven outstation squads, including Kalighat FC from Calcutta, 11 GR from Lucknow and BSF XI from Kadamtala near Siliguri, will feature in the 64th edition of the Independence Cup. “Teams from Darjeeling and Kurseong will also take part in the 12-team tournament.
Kalimpong will be represented by the KSA XI and the Schools United comprising players from different schools of the town,” he added.
The KSA president, who had played for teams like the Calcutta-based Mohammadan Sporting in his youth, said the Independence Cup and the inter-school tournament had always generated passionate following, but what was heartening to notice was that the mini tournament was also getting popular. “This augurs well for the future of the game here. We at the KSA are doing our bit by running an academy to train youngsters.”

Siliguri realtor found shot dead in office- Family alleges murder and points finger at business partner
TT, Siliguri, Aug. 5: A real estate developer was found dead with a bullet injury on the head at his office in a hotel building owned by his business partner here today.
The family of the 42-year-old Tapan Jha ruled out suicide and alleged that he had been murdered by his business partner Gurdeep Singh.
Jha was shot through the forehead and the body was found on a sofa with blood oozing from the head. A 9mm pistol was lying next to the body, but no suicide note was found.
Sources said Jha used to come to the office on the first floor of the four-storied building everyday.
“Like any other day, he came to the office in usual manner around 10.30am today,” said Raju Sharma, the hotel manager. “However, around 12 noon, I was told by some shopkeepers (a market complex is located in a portion of the hotel building) that they had heard a suspicious noise from the office. We immediately rang up Siliguri police,” he said.
When the policemen, led by additional superintendent of police, Siliguri, Gaurav Sharma, reached the spot, the office door was open and Jha’s body was lying on a settee with blood oozing from his head.
“We suspect that he was shot at point-blank range on the forehead with a 9mm pistol, causing his death instantly. The weapon was also found next to the body,” said a police officer.
The police questioned the manager and other staff at the hotel and took away the body. The office was also sealed. The incident invited curious crowds in front of the hotel at Sevoke Road.
According to the hotel staff and relatives of the deceased, Gurdeep was Jha’s close friend and a confidante.
But ever since the incident, he could not be found at the spot nor be contacted. Jha’s wife Bharati said Gurdeep had been threatening her husband for a couple of months.
“Gurdeep called him (Jha) on his cellphone around midnight yesterday and asked for money. Today, around 8.30am, my husband left home and told me that he would return for lunch by 3pm. However, before that, we got the news that he was dead,” she said at the Siliguri District Hospital.
The couple has a five-year-old daughter, who was recently diagnosed with cancer in her right eye.
Shanti, the inconsolable mother, echoed her daughter-in-law and held Jha’s friends responsible for his death.
Jha, sources said, is known to have taken loan from his friends for personal reasons. He was also spending money for his daughter’s treatment.
Jha was a resident of Milanpally in Siliguri.
According to the sources, Jha was a lower division clerk at the district inspector of schools (secondary) office in Jalpaiguri. Since 2003, he had been under suspension for irregular attendance and had started the real estate business.
The realtor’s family has filed an FIR and Gurdeep was named in it.
D.P. Singh, the superintendent of police of Darjeeling, said they were not ruling out the possibility of either suicide or murder. “A murder case has been registered on the basis of the complaint filed by Jha’s family. The office room at the hotel has been sealed to keep the evidences intact and for further probe by fingerprint experts of the CID.”
Tenders invited for highway repair- Hope for end to travel troubles
TT, Siliguri, Aug. 5: The National Highways Authority of India has invited tenders for the repair of NH31D that developed craters on a major stretch in Jalpaiguri and Darjeeling districts, where thousands of people have to bear the brunt of bumpy rides everyday.
Troubles faced by travellers on other north Bengal roads are also likely to be over soon, with the public works department announcing the launch of repair on state highways.
Accidents, leading to deaths or injuries and damage to vehicles are regular on NH31D’s stretch from Siliguri to Dhupguri and the Birpara-Alipurduar state highway over the past couple of months.
Political and social organisation have put up blockades on roads to demand their immediate repair, but such modes of protest have only added to the miseries faced by the commuters.
Things will, however, change soon as the NHAI has issued two separate tenders to repair the Siliguri-Jalpaiguri and Jalpaiguri-Mainaguri-Dhupguri sections of NH31D with an estimated total expenditure of around Rs 1.3 crore. The tenders have been floated and will be opened on August 10. The repair is expected to start by August 15 and finish within 60 days. “We have already issued tenders and hope that extensive repair can be taken up next week or so,” said R.K. Chaudhury, the project director of the NHAI based in Siliguri.
Dasrath Tirkey, the minister of state for the PWD, said affected stretches of state and national highways under the jurisdiction of his department would also be repaired soon.
“The road leading to Alipurduar from Birpara is in its worst condition and needs urgent repair. Rs 11 crore has been sanctioned for this purpose. Other roads will also be made suitable for trouble-free travel soon as we want to finish work before mid-October,” said the minister.
Asked about the condition of national highways, Tirkey said he was contemplating approaching the NHAI with a plea for their speedy repair. “As these roads are taken care of by the NHAI, it is up to them to carry out the repair,” said the minister. “However, given the present condition of the roads, we are mulling over a proposal to obtain a no-objection certificate from the NHAI and take up the repair on our own.”
National Highway 31 and NH55 passing through north Bengal also need urgent repair. While the Bagdogra-Siliguri-Salugara stretch of NH31 has hardly bitumen cover, 500 metres of NH55 caved in after landslides at Paglajhora more than a month ago. The NHAI could not yet start repair on NH55 connecting Siliguri with Darjeeling as frequent landslides because of rains hamper the work.
Transporters sounded relieved when told about the process for the repair being set in motion.
“Buses plying on different routes in the districts of Jalpaiguri and Cooch Behar are running late, causing inconvenience to passengers as well as us,” said Pranab Mani, the secretary of the Darjeeling Inter-District Minibus Owners’ Association. “Damage of vehicles because of accidents and bad roads have become a regular phenomenon and our overhead costs increased to a substantial point. We are happy to hear that repairs will begin soon,” he added.
Tourism for cinchona recovery- Track Tagore hill stay
Rajiv Ravidas, TT, Kalimpong, Aug. 5: The directorate of cinchona and other medicinal plants is working out a plan to cultivate fruits and flowers and launch tourism projects in the hope that the diversification could help turn the ailing plantations in the hills around.
The 150-year-old cinchona plantation has been running at a loss for years and experts say the only way of sustaining the sector is diversification. In fact, the directorate has already started cultivating fruits and flowers on a commercial basis as part of its effort to correct the balance sheet. The plantations earn Rs 10 crore annually, but the expenditure by way of salary and wages alone is a whopping Rs 26 crore.
Gyan C. Subba, the director of cinchona and other medicinal plants, said tourism and organic cultivation had a huge market and his directorate was of the opinion that it could leverage some of the land in its possession by taking to tourism. “We have 26,000 acres of land spread across different areas in the hills and some plots have extraordinary scenic beauty. With proper planning, they can be turned into vibrant tourism destinations,” he said.
Of the 26,000 acres, cinchona is cultivated on only about 10,000 acres.
Subba said Nanthing above Latpanchor in Kurseong subdivision is a scenic spot with a small lake where salamanders can be found, while Mungpoo in Darjeeling subdivision can be developed as a historical tourist attraction, given its connections with Nobel laureate Rabindranath Tagore.
“Rongo (in Kalimpong subdivision), on the other hand, can be promoted for trekking as the place has very pristine forest along the border with Bhutan,” he added.
There are many other similar places that can be easily developed as tourism hotspots, said Subba. “People today are fed up with city-centric tourism. They would rather prefer to visit quiet far-flung places like the ones we have in plenty. We can construct small bamboo huts along the streams (cutting across the plantations). From architecture to food and beverage, the idea would be to keep everything local and traditional. Our stress should be more on village tourism.”
The director said a preliminary discussion on the plan had been held with state tourism department officials, and things could move on from there. “We obviously do not have the money (to fund the project). We need to talk to others, even private players. We hope something will happen,” he added.
Lawyers to boycott CJ oath taking
TT, Gangtok, Aug. 5: The Bar Association of Sikkim has decided to boycott the ceremony where Justice P.D. Dinakaranwill be sworn in as the new Chief Justice of Sikkim High Court on August 9.
Justice Dinakaran, who faces a probe by a panel of three Supreme Court judges into corruption charges against him, has been transferred from Karnataka High Court to Sikkim on July 30.
He has been asked to take charge on or before August 13.
The decision to boycott the swearing-in was taken by the 280-member association at an emergency general body meeting at its office in the district and session court here yesterday afternoon .
“We have decided to boycott the oath-taking ceremony. We are not against any individual but the manner in which the transfer took place. We are not happy with the decision of the Supreme Court collegium because it is not in the interest of Sikkim and Sikkim judiciary,” association president D.R. Thapa told reporters today.
Thapa said the association had the highest regard for the institution and the judge who was being transferred to Sikkim.
“But we have the problem against the collegium’s decision. We are not satisfied with their decision because they have undermined and demeaned the institution for which we have the highest regard,” Thapa said.
The association had requested the President, Prime Minister and the Supreme Court collegium not to transfer Justice Dinakaran to Sikkim when a move to shift him here had been reported in April.
Although the association members will be boycotting the oath-taking ceremony, they will appear before the court of the Chief Justice.
“We will be appearing before the Chief Justice in court proceedings keeping in view the interests of the litigants, state and general people at large,” Thapa said.
Swine Flue tolls 114
TT, KOLKATA, 5 AUG: Five new cases of Swine Flu were reported in the city today taking the total number of the affected persons to 114 in the state. The youngest of the 114 was a a six-day-old baby who tested positive for H1N1 virus a few days ago and will be discharged from a city hospital tomorrow.
The baby was admitted at BC Roy Memorial Hospital with upper respiratory chest infection a few days back. Born at NRS Medical College and Hospital, the baby was shifted to BC Roy Memorial Hospital after doctors noticed he contracted a chest infection. After he developed Swine Flu like symptoms, his throat swab was collected and sent to National Institute of Cholera and Enteric Diseases (NICED), which later tested positive.
His mother was quarantined at Beliaghata ID Hospital.
Doctors at BC Roy Memorial Hospital said when the baby was first admitted at the hospital where his condition was critical. He was kept at a separate isolation ward. According to them the baby had an H1N1 infection which later led to a viral pneumonia and he had to be put on ventilation.
He was also administered Oseltamivir tablets of low dosage for seven days following which his throat swab report was collected again, which tested negative.
Dr Mrinal Chatterjee, medical superintendent of the hospital said the baby was kept at the isolation ward for 11 days.
Meanwhile, officials of the state health department today inspected the isolation facility that is being set up for pregnant mothers at NRS Medical College and Hospital. Dr Asit Biswas, nodal officer of Swine Flu said, the isolation facility is going to be open from Sunday. Construction work is still on as they had suggested setting up of certain added facilities at the ward, he added.
Five new cases of Swine Flu that were reported in the city today. All of them have been quarantined at Beliaghata ID Hospital.
Eleven patients are currently admitted at various hospitals and the condition of one patient is said to be in a critical condition.
Adolescence Teen Camp Organised by Darjeeling Clusters  started from today in Kalimpong
Monsoon Fantasy a moment caught in Kalimpong by Samten Kabo

Trinamul hide-and-seek on Lalgarh rally - Party walks tightrope
TT, Calcutta, Aug 5: The decision of the People’s Committee Against Police Atrocities to attend Mamata Banerjee’s Lalgarh rally on August 9 has put her lieutenants in a dilemma: how to make the rally a success without allowing the committee to be too visible at the programme.
The Trinamul Congress chief does not want to be seen to be close to the Maoist-backed organisation but her party leaders concede that the committee’s participation can make a big difference to the rally.
Caught in this conflict, Trinamul leaders today said they would not allow prominent committee leaders to attend the rally and certainly not the outfit’s flags and banners.
However, party leaders privately admit that they cannot possibly prevent committee supporters or activists from joining the rally.
The committee today said it would lift its indefinite blockade from August 7 to 9 so that the rally could be held smoothly.
Mamata today sent Union minister of state for shipping, Mukul Roy, to Lalgarh to ask party functionaries in West Midnapore to ensure that no prominent committee leaders or functionaries attended the “apolitical” rally.
Committee chief Manoj Mahato had said yesterday that his outfit would attend the August 9 rally to hear what Mamata “has to say about the people in Jungle Mahal”. Committee leaders have also “ordered” villagers in Lalgarh and Salboni to attend the meeting.
Mrityunjoy Mahato, a Lalgarh resident, said committee leaders had asked villagers to “mobilise people for the rally and, if necessary, hire trucks to ferry them to the venue”.
Trinamul sources said Mamata had held a meeting in Delhi yesterday with her close aides to discuss how her party could distance itself from the committee. The aides suggested that a “message should be sent” to Trinamul’s “political adversaries” that the party was “averse to entertaining any People’s Committee leader or member” at the rally.
“Mamata readily accepted the suggestion and sent Mukul to convey our tough stand on the People’s Committee to our party leaders in West Midnapore,” a Trinamul leader said from Delhi.
After meeting the West Midnapore leaders, Roy said: “We are holding an apolitical rally. Everyone can attend it. We don’t know any People’s Committee leader and we have no connection with any such organisation. We are holding the rally in a bid to restore peace in Jungle Mahal. All who want peace to be restored are welcome to attend the rally.”
He also inspected the school ground where the rally will be held.
However, sources in Trinamul’s West Midnapore unit said the party had today asked committee leaders not to make the presence of their supporters and activists at the rally too conspicuous.
A local committee leader confirmed that Trinamul had contacted the outfit. “We have asked our supporters not to attend the rally with committee flags, banners or placards. Our supporters will also not raise slogans other than those related to the demands for development and the withdrawal of the joint forces,” he said.
Director-general of police Bhupinder Singh today said if “wanted” committee activists were seen at the rally, they would be arrested.
PCPA ‘not banned’
State Congress president Manas Bhuniya said there was nothing wrong if the committee attended the rally because it had “not been declared a banned outfit”. He, however, said his party would stay away from the rally.

Wednesday, August 4, 2010

State Clueless on territory....Relay Hunger strike of ABGL withdrawn.. Center not willing to hold meeting with Ghising.

TT, Darjeeling, Aug. 4: The state government seems to have made little headway on the territory to be brought under the interim set-up for the Darjeeling hills even as it succeeded in defusing a potentially explosive situation by impressing upon the ABGL to lift the relay hunger strike during the Calcutta meeting on Tuesday.
Dawa Sherpa, the working president of the ABGL, today drove straight to Chowrastha on his arrival from Calcutta and announced the party’s decision to lift the hunger strike. The fast had been organised to demand the immediate arrest of those involved in the murder of Madan Tamang on May 21.
“In Calcutta, Samar Ghosh (state home secretary) assured us that action would be taken within a month. We have decided to postpone the hunger strike for a month. If the government fails to act, we will stage a fast unto death in front of Writers’ Buildings,” said Sherpa.
The ABGL had earlier threatened to convert the relay hunger strike into an indefinite fast unto death, an agitation, which had the potential to turn the situation in the hills explosive.
On the issue of an interim set-up, Sherpa added that the need for the hour was a permanent solution (read statehood) and not a stopgap arrangement.
“If the set-up is imposed on the hills, there will be widespread resentment and the demand for Gorkhaland will be raised within three months of accepting the arrangement,” added Sherpa.
In fact, Sherpa, who is also the convener of the Democratic Front, a six-party anti-Morcha alliance, seems to be preparing to start a campaign against the set-up.
“We will translate this document into Nepali and distribute copies to the masses. After demanding statehood, what is the compulsion for the Morcha to accept such a proposal,” asked Sherpa.
The Morcha, on the other hand, said it had already made the Centre’s proposal public on March 15. “We made the document public as we had rejected the Centre’s proposal and had drafted one on our own,” said Roshan Giri, the general secretary of the Morcha.
Terming the front as an anti-Gorkhaland force, Giri said: “They could have sat for the meeting in Siliguri since it was being chaired by Asok Bhattacharya. They went to Calcutta to conspire with the state government to work against the creation of Gorkhaland.”
Iterating its stand on the territory, Giri said: “Our demand is the inclusion of the Terai and the Dooars and we are firm on that.”
Observers say with the Centre agreeing to grant legislative powers to the new interim authority, it is only to be seen which side has more bargaining powers to finalise the subjects to be transferred to the set-up.
“However, the issue that can make or break this arrangement is the territory which is to be brought under the authority. There seems be no agreement on this point,” said an observer.
While the Centre and the state want the set-up to be confined to the three hill subdivisions of Darjeeling, Kalimpong and Kurseong, the Morcha wants the Dooars, Terai and Siliguri also to be part of the arrangement.
Giri, however, admitted that the party was preparing its observation as directed by the Centre at the June 24 tripartite meeting. “Our observation will be made public once the report is finalised.”
The Morcha has also decided to close down DGHC offices from August 6, but will allow the education department to function on Fridays. “The party will also organise a programme on Independence Day at Mungpoo where social worker P.R Pradhan from Kalimpong will be the chief guest,” said Giri.
ABGL withdraws Fast 

Darjeeling Times, Darjeeling, Aug 4: Democratic Front, coalition of hills political parties other than Gorkha Jan Mukti Morcha, arrived in Darjeeling town today, after the meeting held with the state government on August 3. Dawa Sherpa, convener of Democratic Front, was a quick to hold a public address and press release at Chowrasta, providing detail information about bilateral meeting held between state government and Democratic Front.
We have categorically rejected the Interim Authority, we want permanent solution for the chronic case like ours, pain killer would not work, the ‘Interim’ is a temporary solution. However, state govt. has sought our opinion in written, on the proposal of ‘Interim Authority’ – substitution for DGHC, by August 6, said Dawa Sherpa, during the public address at Chowrasta today.
We have clearly told the state government to restore the democracy and peace before anything to be implemented in the hills and committed at the extent of our subsequent agitation for the justice to Late Madan Tamang, said Dawa Sherpa. Respecting the assurance given by the state government, particularly Home Secretary Samar Ghosh, we are suspending our on going hunger strike for a month, disclosed Dawa Sherpa during the public address at Chowrasta today.
However, if state government fails to arrest culprits involved in the murder of Madan Tamang by next one month, we will again initiate Hunger strike, not only in Darjeeling but also in Kolkata, said Dawa Sherpa.
DRAFT DISSCUSSION PAPER (GAA)
1.    An autonomous self-governing body to be known as Gorkhaland Autonomous Authority (GAA) would be established within the State of West Bengal.
2.    This would be an interim authority valid upto 31.12.2011 and could be extended if all the parties to the agreement agree to do so.
3.    It is agreed that election to the Gram Panchayats and Panchayat Samities in the GAA are could be held within the next 6 months.
4.    The initial composition of the 20 member GAA would be 20 members of which 15 would be nominated by the political parties in proportion to the number of seats won by the respective parties in the Gram Panchayat and Panchayat Samity. 5 members would be nominated by the Governor of West Bengal from the unrepresented communities of the GAA area. The nominated members would have the same rights and privileges as other members, including voting rights.
5.    Formal elections to the GAA would be held thereafter within 12 months of the coming into force of the GAA.
6.    The term of the elected members of the GAA shall be for five years.
7.    The GAA shall have legislative powers in respect of the subjects transferred to it enumerated in Annexure II-A.
8.    The area of the GAA would be the area of the Darjeeling Gorkha Hill Council
9.    All laws made by the GAA in respect of the subjects enumerated in Annexure-II shall be submitted to the Governor of West Bengal and on his assent the same shall come into effect.
10.    The GAA shall have executive, administrative and financial powers in respect of subjects transferred to it.
11.    The GAA shall have control over the officers and staff connected with the delegated subjects working in the GAA area and shall be competent to transfer these officers and staff within the GAA area.
12.    ACRs of these officers would be written by the appropriate officers in the GAA.
13.    The offices of the Deputy Commissioner and the Superintendent of Police would be outside the superintendence and control of the GAA.
14.    The Government of West Bengal would provide an amount, to be decided every year on a population ratio basis as grant-in-aid in two equal installments to the GAA for executing development works. In addition, the GAA would be paid a suitable amount of plan and non-plan fund to cover the office expenses and the salaries of the staff working under their control. The GAA shall have full authority in selecting the activities and choosing the amount for the investment under the same in any year. The plan prepared by the GAA would be a sub-set of the State Plan and would be treated as an integral part.
15.    The State Government shall not divert the funds allocated to the GAA to other funds and also ensure its timely release.
16.    The executive functions of the GAA shall be exercised through its Principal Secretary who shall be an officer of the rank not below the Principal Secretary / Commissioner of the Government of West Bengal. The Principal Secretary once deputed to the GAA shall not be transferred for a period of at least 2 year without the consent of the GAA.
17.    Governor of West Bengal shall, through an appropriate agency, obtain a report on the functioning of the GAA and cause that Report with his recommendation to be laid on the Table of the West Bengal Assembly on an annual basis. The Governor of West Bengal shall also be authorized to call for and obtain any report either from the GAA or the State Government in respect of either the allocation of funds, its timely release and its utilization and give such directions as the Governor may deem fit so that the provisions of the agreement constituting the GAA are fully met.
18.    In order to accelerate the development of the region and to meet the aspirations of the people, the Government of India will provide a financial assistance of Rs_______________  crore per annum to GAA for three years for specific projects identified by the GAA to develop the socio-economic infrastructure in the GAA area. This amount would be provided as grant-in-aid and would be over and above the normal plan assistance to the State of West Bengal.
19.    Gorkhaland personnel (GLP) would be considered for recruitment in the Police, Army and Para-Military Forces.
Center not willing to hold meeting with Ghising
KalimNews: GNLF Chief Subhas Ghising succeeded in meeting Home Minister P Chidambaram  in New Delhi. But Chidambaram replied in negative to Ghising's request for including him in the tripartite talks. Instead Chidambaram clearly stated that Ghising may give suggestions for any solutions or proposals but in view of the progress so far made in solving the Darjeeling and Gorkha issue center is not ready to include anyone in the talks other than Morcha. 
Meanwhile TMC Chief Mamata Banerjee is likely to visit Darjeeling after the Monsoon session of Parliament. Parliament Session will conclude on 24h August.
Ghising a spent force, says GJM
TH, KOLKATA: Subash Ghising, the Gorkha National Liberation Front (GNLF) president, should not “jeopardise” the progress of tripartite talks with the Centre and the State Government if he wants to return to the Darjeeling hills, the Gorkha Janamukti Morcha (GJM) leadership has cautioned.
The GJM leadership claimed that Mr. Ghising, whose hegemony in the region had lasted more than two decades since the mid-1980s, has become “irrelevant to local politics” and any meeting between him and the Centre would “not have any impact” on the political future of the Darjeeling hills.
It was reacting to the GNLF chief calling on the Union Home Minister P. Chidambaram in New Delhi on Wednesday.
“The outcome of any meeting he may have with the Centre will not have a bearing in the hills where he is a refugee, being himself unable to return to what was once his turf after being rejected by the people here”, senior GJM central committee member, Harka Bahadur Chettri, told The Hindu over telephone.
Mr. Ghising has been in political limbo ever since he was forced out of Darjeeling in July 2008, nine months after the GJM entered the political scenario replacing the GNLF as the principal political force in the region. His one-time protégé, Bimal Gurung, is the GJM president.
“We are also confident that unless the Centre props him in some way or the other Mr. Ghising on his own is irrelevant to local politics. He is a spent force”, Mr. Chettri said.
As a political entity in the Darjeeling hills the GNLF has been severely marginalised. Earlier this week Gaulan Lepcha, the MLA from Kalimpong who was elected on GNLF ticket, joined the GJM – the most recent setback to the Front.
Invitation for GNLF
In a bid to bring the non-GJM parties into the dialogue process to discuss the proposal for an interim administrative set up for the Darjeeling hills, the West Bengal Government had invited the GNLF to talks here on Tuesday. The GNLF, however, did not join the discussions.
Meanwhile, in response to an appeal by the State Government to call off the relay hunger strike by its volunteers, the leadership of the Akhil Bharatiya Gorkha League – an opponent of the GJM -- announced “suspending” for a month the relay fast that entered its 12 day.
Other Voices
Editorial, TT, 5 Aug: Only in a democracy, minority voices can hope to be heard. There is thus nothing wrong with the West Bengal government talking to smaller parties in order to end the stalemate in Darjeeling. So long have the hills been in turmoil that any move to involve more players should add to the search for a political consensus. Both the Centre and the state governments erred in the past by talking only to the dominant political force in Darjeeling, ignoring other voices. This happened while Subash Ghishing’s Gorkha National Liberation Front was the main player in the hills. The same thing happened with the Gorkha Janmukti Morcha, which is unquestionably the leading player in Darjeeling now. Neither New Delhi nor Calcutta can hope to find a solution to the Darjeeling imbroglio without taking the GJM into confidence. That does not mean, however, that other voices should not be heard. The GJM, too, should not see the state government’s parleys with other parties as a threat to its supremacy in Darjeeling. The murder of Madan Tamang, the former president of the Akhil Bharatiya Gorkha League, sometime back, pointed to the dangers of the politics of intolerance and violence that had prevailed in Darjeeling for long. Darjeeling needs pluralist politics as much as any other place.
However, the important question for the common people in Darjeeling is not which party rules the place but how soon a solution to the problem is found. And it should be clear that the problem is primarily one of identity politics and not of development. Since the formation of the Darjeeling Gorkha Hill Council, both the Centre and the state governments have given it a considerable amount of funds. Mr Ghishing may not have done enough to ensure that the funds were properly utilized. But it was the cry for a separate state that led to his downfall, just as it had once made him popular. The GJM leaders clearly want everything to stop in Darjeeling until a separate state is formed there. But they have made things more complicated by wanting parts of the Dooars and the Terai to be included in their proposed state. In doing so, they have actually added unclear dimensions to their identity politics. For there are other contestants for this brand of politics in the Dooars and the Terai. Uncharted boundaries for an expanding Gorkhaland may not be a workable idea.
Academy eye on Sikkim- Bhaichung to write to govt for land
TT, Gangtok, Aug. 4: Bhaichung Bhutia is considering setting up his “dream” football academy in Sikkim and will soon approach the state government with a request for land, though he has already been offered a plot of 30 acres by the Madhya Pradesh government for the same.
“Bhaichung and his Bollywood friend John Abraham are serious about setting up a football academy in Sikkim. The Indian football captain wants to give his home state the first preference,” said Arjun Rai, a close friend of Bhaichung.
Rai had met Bhaichung and John in Mumbai on July 30 and the three had deliberated on the academy.
“The Madhya Pradesh government has already offered 30 acres of land to Bhaichung but he is more interested in Sikkim. He wants to uplift the football standard of his home state and promote budding talents all over the nation through the academy,” said Rai, an accounts officer in the Sikkim rural development department.
Rai said Bhaichung would submit an application to the state sports department this month, seeking land for the academy.
How much land Bhaichung needs for the academy?
Rai said a minimum of 10 acres would be appropriate, considering the hilly terrain and lack of free land in Sikkim.
An academy must have at least two grounds and Bhaichung wants to have both artificial turf and natural grass grounds along with a hostel fully equipped with gym and other facilities for the players, said Rai. “Bhaichung wants his dream project, the football academy, to be the best in the country.”
The Indian captain has already asked Philip De Rider, a former Belgian coach of East Bengal, to join him in the academy, said Rai.
According to Rai, Bhaichung and John will come to Sikkim in October to pursue the request with the state government. The football captain will soon be returning to Portugal where he will join the Indian squad and will be busy with national duty till September.
“John is very much interested in the project and has promised Bhaichung all help,” said Rai.
Bhaichung had first spoken about his dream project of a football academy during a programme at Paljor Stadium here in November 2008.
“I am working on a project for some time. It’s my dream to set up a football academy in India when I retire from professional football. I will be soon approaching different state governments for this,” Bhaichung had said.
Youth held with pipegun in court
TT, Siliguri, Aug. 4: A 28-year-old youth was caught with an illegal firearm on the Jalpaiguri district court premises today.
Police are, however, clueless about the intention of Prasanta Roy, a resident of Subhas Unnayan Pally in Jalpaiguri.
Around 1pm, some people spotted Prasanta standing near the law clerks’ rooms.
“He had a pipegun on his waist and anybody looking at him could easily make out that he was carrying a weapon,” a witness said.
As the people started quizzing him on what he was carrying, Prasanta appeared confused. Within minutes, the crowd overpowered him and called police.
Officers from Kotwali police station, around 200 metres away, reached the spot shortly and arrested the youth. By then, a large crowd of people, lawyers, litigants and others had gathered there.
After his arrest, Prasanta appeared baffled and claimed himself to be the driver of Joydip Mukherjee, a businessman and a resident of Nayabustypara in town.
“I brought him (Mukherjee) to the court on his car. After parking the vehicle, he handed over the gun to me and asked me to keep it for some time. He said he was going to meet a lawyer,” the youth told the police.
However, no key of a vehicle was found on him.
The officers took Prasanta to the police station. “We are not completely buying the story narrated by Prasanta,” an officer said. “We will interrogate him further and, if necessary, his employer may be arrested. The firearm seized was illegal and did not have the licence.”
Court sources said shortly after Prasanta was arrested, Mukherjee left the premises with his vehicle. Since then, he could not be contacted.
Cop gets axe for firing-Murder case against two land officials
TT, Islampur, Aug. 4: The inspector in-charge of Islampur police station was suspended for his alleged dereliction of duty after a guardian had been killed and two others had suffered bullet injuries in police firing at a school near here on July 29.
Order to suspend Krishnendu Mukherjee reached the district superintendent of police Milan Kanti Das from the office of the director-general of police last night.
With Mukherjee’s punishment, the total number of police personnel suspended after the July 29 incident has risen to eight. Two sub-inspectors, one assistant sub-inspector and four constables had been benched earlier.
A case under Section 302 IPC (punishment for murder) has also been started against additional district magistrate-cum-district land reforms officer Kamalkrishna Chakraborty and block land reforms officer (BLRO) Biswadip Banerjee on the basis of a complaint lodged by the headmaster of Srikrishnapur High School, 7km from here.
District magistrate Sunil Dandapat said the role of the two officers was not above suspicion. “A report has been sent to the home department.”
The trouble started around 2pm on July 29 when Ganesh Gayen, a clerk with the refugee rehabilitation department, armed with an order from the additional district magistrate, went to take possession of a one-acre plot of land in front of the school.
Gayen was accompanied by the BLRO and four police constables. On seeing the persons measuring the land, the teachers and the students of the school raised protest, which followed a heated exchange.
Soon a crowd gathered in front of the school and the BLRO and the policemen were dragged and locked in a room. The mob attacked the policemen who came to rescue the officers and torched their vehicles, forcing the men in khaki to open fire. A guardian of the student was killed and two others suffered injuries in the firing.
The district police chief today said: “We received complaints of mismanagement against the IC in handling the situation. The incident could have been avoided if he had remained alert and active.”
Das said the IC should have assessed the situation beforehand and adequate policemen should have been deployed on the spot to avert the violence. The BLRO had also asked for reinforcement, but the IC had ignored it. “The inspector-general (special) of police, R. Ramesh Babu who visited the spot on that day to assess what had led to the police firing, recommended the IC’s suspension,” he said.
Mukherjee will remain suspended pending a depatmental inquiry and will get half of his salary during the period, sources said. He, refused to talk to the media.
Congress chairperson of the Islampur Municipality Kanailal Agarwal alleged that huge money was involved in the deal between the land owner and the land reforms officials and the police.
Scat test raises tiger hope in Buxa forest
TT, Alipurduar, Aug. 4: The Buxa Tiger Reserve has more big cats than what is thought to be, the Centre for Cellular and Molecular Biology has said.
The Hyderabad-based centre sent a report to the principal chief conservator of forests (PCCF-wildlife) and the field director of the Buxa Tiger Reserve after conducting DNA tests in its laboratory on scat samples sent by foresters.
Of the 83 scat samples tested, 33 were “definitely” of tiger origin, the report said. More tests are being carried out on these “tiger-positive” samples to determine their genetic identity, the report added.
Sighting Royal Bengal tigers in the reserve is very rare and far between. On March 24, beat officer Manindra Sarkar could spot a tiger and even managed to capture a photograph on his camera.
“This is the first time that such an intensive scat collection drive was taken up in March and 83 samples were sent for DNA tests to Hyderabad. From the 33 positive samples, we expect there will be at least 20 tigers as some of the samples could be repeated,” said R.P. Saini, the field director of the reserve.
He said the reserve had been facing a lot of criticism as there was hardly any sighting of tiger and when the beat officer captured a big cat on camera there was a sense of relief among the foresters.
In 2007, a census conducted by the Wildlife Institute of India had put the number of tigers in Buxa at 12.
“In forests like Kaziranga, Kanha, Ranthambhor, there are grasslands and open areas where tigers are often sighted. The dense and high forest in Buxa has made setting of camera traps difficult,” Saini said.
“The National Tiger Conservation Authority has assured us digital cameras for setting up traps in areas from where the positive samples were collected,” Saini said, adding that the PCCF had also sanctioned Rs 30 lakh to improve grassland.
The director said this year the scat collection would start from the beginning of December and would target the areas that had not been covered earlier.
DYFI too wants probe into teacher choice
TT, Siliguri, Aug. 4: The DYFI today came out in open against the final list for the recruitment of teachers by the district primary school council with a delegation of the CPM youth wing demanding a probe into allegation of nepotism in the process.
Following the publication of the final list by the council for the recruitment of over 1,000 primary teachers in Jalpaiguri district, supporters of the DYFI and the SFI had alleged in private that eligible candidates had not been considered and jobs had been cornered by the relatives of CPM leaders.
But today, around 25 DYFI workers, led by leaders like Biplab Jha and Girindranath Dutta, submitted a memorandum to the Jalpaiguri district magistrate, demanding a probe into the recruitment drive.
“We want a proper investigation into the recruitment process. The administration must ensure that there is no confusion in the final list,” said a DYFI leader.
Sources said CPM leaders had faced protests from DYFI and SFI members, who alleged that deserving applicants could not find a berth in final list. They also alleged that CPM leaders had got two-three relatives each included in the job list. One name they mentioned was that of Krishna Kishore Jha, a leader of the CPM-dominated All Bengal Teachers’ Association. His daughter Punam, son Kaushal, son-in-law Pawan and nephew Santosh have found a place in the final merit list.
Jha, however, said save his son, others could not be considered as his “family members”.
The Youth Congress today continued with its demonstrations to demand the cancellation of the merit list and the resignation of Mrinal Pal, the council chairman.
Youth Congress members assembled on DBC Road in Jalpaiguri and shouted slogans in front of Subodh Sen Bhawan, the CPM office. Traffic was disrupted and the protesters burnt an effigy of state school education minister Partha Dey before dispersing.
The Trinamul Congress, on the other hand, said a list of 168 deserving candidates, who were denied the jobs, had been submitted to the district magistrate with relevant details.
“We submitted a list of candidates to the district magistrate today and sought her intervention. She has assured all steps from her end,” said Chandan Bhowmik, the secretary general of Jalpaiguri district Trinamul Congress. “Members of our youth wing has been sitting on a dharna in front of the council office for the past six days,” he added.
Vandana Yadav, the district magistrate, said she was looking into the matter. “We have received several memoranda, pointing out the omission of eligible candidates from the final list. However, no individual complaint has been lodged with me. The administration will definitely take care if such complaints are made. Nevertheless, we are looking into the issue,” said Yadav.
The district CPM leadership continued to keep mum, while the council chairman was unavailable for comment. 
Youth kills sister
TT, Alipurduar, Aug. 4: A youth hacked his 16-year-old sister to death today at Kalipur in Falakata, enraged over the girl’s alleged affair with a local resident.
Police said Chiranjit Das had been telling his sister that she was tarnishing the family’s reputation by having a relationship with a local youth. This morning, the siblings had a quarrel and Chiranjit asked his sister to leave the house. “Suddenly he lost his temper and picked up a sharp weapon. The girl started to flee, but she was caught and hacked to death by Das. He also injured his youngest sister, who had come to the rescue of her sister. The injured girl was hospitalised,” said an investigating officer. Chiranjit later surrendered before Falakata police.
Officer arrested for bribery
TT, Malda: The district leprosy officer of Malda, Biplab Dasgupta, was arrested on Wednesday while accepting a bribe of Rs 20,000 and a mobile handset for renewing the licence of a nursing home. Chief medical officer of health Srikanta Roy said he did not believe that the officer, who is in-charge of renewing licences of private nursing homes, would accept bribe and alleged that Dasgupta was the victim of a conspiracy.
CPM vs Cong -bullets hit two
Islampur: Two persons were hit by stray bullets and four others were injured when two groups led by the CPM and the Congress clashed near Kaliganj High School on Wednesday. Supporters of both parties had taken out processions for the August 8 managing committee election of the institution, 30km from here. The injured were taken to the Dalua block health centre. The two with bullet injuries were referred to the subdivisional hospital here.
Silent Bengal tops teen mother list
http://www.telegraphindia.com/1100805/images/05zzchartbig.jpgTT, New Delhi, Aug. 4: Bengal has the largest proportion of teenage mothers in the country, according to a data sheet prepared by the family planning division of the Union health ministry.
The grim statistics emerged on a day the Lok Sabha discussed ways to control population and some MPs found merit in Sanjay Gandhi’s iron-fist policy. But Union health minister Ghulam Nabi Azad hastened to say “once bitten, twice shy” to make clear forcible measures would not be adopted.
The data sheet, prepared ahead of the debate on population stabilisation in the Lok Sabha, said 14 per cent of births in Bengal were to women aged between 15 and 19.
It said 41 per cent of girls in Bengal were married below the age of 18 years, placing the state, along with Rajasthan, second from the top in illegal marriages. Only Bihar has a higher proportion of 46 per cent girls marrying before 18.
The data also came a day after crime figures revealed that Bengal had become more unsafe for women in 2008 compared to 2000.
Non-government population control activists believe that early marriages and births reflect lack of awareness and a failure of campaigns to reach areas where population control is most needed.
“In parts of the state, any discussion of sexual and reproductive health services is still a taboo among adolescents,” said Sahana Bhowmick, the branch manager with the Family Planning Association of India, Calcutta. “Educational campaigns about the risks of early pregnancy and options to space births have not reached grassroots — and people don’t talk about it,” Bhowmick told The Telegraph.
The health ministry data, based on district-level surveys in 2008, showed that Bihar had the lowest average age of marriage for girls — 17.6 years, followed by Rajasthan with 17.7 years. In Bengal, the average age of marriage was 18.5 years.
The data suggested that Bengal has the highest participation of males in sterilisation with 14 per cent of men undergoing vasectomies, followed by Punjab where 13.4 per cent men underwent the procedure.
But one non-government official involved in delivering population control services in Bengal said the state’s 14 per cent vasectomy figure was “difficult to believe”. In a clinic that the non-government agency operates, the official said, the vasectomy figure was less than 2 per cent.
Yet, Bengal is among eight states that appear to be on the threshold of achieving a total fertility ratio (TFR) of about 2.1 — a so-called replacement level of fertility in which women have just enough babies to replace themselves.
Andhra Pradesh, Goa, Himachal Pradesh, Karnataka, Kerala, Punjab and Haryana have achieved TFRs below 2.1. The poorest-performing states are Bihar, Jharkhand, Madhya Pradesh, Rajasthan and Uttar Pradesh where TFR is 2.7 or higher.
Bhowmick said most women pregnant below 19 years of age usually visited state hospitals that are overcrowded with little infrastructure for reproductive health counselling. Doctors probably did the best they could to handle the pregnancy, she said, and had little time or the expertise to counsel the women about the disadvantages of early pregnancies.
But early births aren’t confined to eastern and northern India. Karnataka had the second highest proportion (11 per cent) of births to women below 19 years, while Andhra Pradesh had 10 per cent births to women below 19.
RTI power takes a lethal turn 
Raja Murthy, SNS: If information is power, India’s Right to Information Act (RTI) activists are bravely bringing power to the people – but at a fatal cost to themselves. Amit Jethwa was shot dead outside the Ahmedabad High Court on 20 July, the ninth RTI-related murder in the past six months.
An environmental activist who was called The Green Crusader, 32-year old Jethwa was using the RTI Act to expose illegal mining in the Gir forest. His family accused a member of Parliament of plotting his murder. Another prominent RTI activist, Satish Shetty, was killed outside his house in Pune in January. Shetty was exposing the local real estate mafia.
Death threats are becoming a common plight for RTI applicants, the threats increasing with RTI power to expose corruption. Since becoming law in October 2005, the RTI Act has become one of India’s strongest democratic tools, ensuring greater accountability and transparency from those earning their salaries from the taxes we pay.
As an RTI activist said, we have to occasionally check on our servants, and the RTI Act gives us the chance to inspect our government servants.
SK Nangian, a veteran Mum bai-based RTI activist, told me the RTI is a more effective anti-corruption tool than public interest litigations. Litigations could be stuck in courts for years. With the RTI Act, citizens can expect information from government officials within 30 days. Or the Public Information Commissioner can be asked to step in.
Nangian, a retired executive, says the system works well enough to have fetched him responses to most of the 500-plus RTI applications he has filed. This unprecedented effectiveness in transparency has its dark side in corrupt officials, businessmen, politicians, police officers and bureaucrats flexing muscles to discourage inconvenient RTI applicants.
It’s worse in states like Jammu and Kashmir that are ranked among the most corrupt in India. Activists of the “Jammu and Kashmir RTI Movement’’ say people are often threatened barely hours after filing any probing RTI application. J&K has its own RTI Act, but the state government has been dawdling over implementing necessary supporting mechanisms such as the Chief Information Commissioner for the state. Yet activists in J&K like Dr Muzaffar Bhatt are determined to fight for the public right to information, despite threats.
Mahesh Pandya, an environmental engineer and a leading Gujarat-based activist often in the “threatened’’ category, says RTI efforts are worth the risk. “Of course, we protested injustices before, but the RTI gives us information, evidence and a state-backed machinery to sustain the argument and continue an agitation,” he says. “Most importantly, we have now understood the working of our government – how decisions are made and what we as citizens can do, in the larger democratic process.”
Pandya says the current RTI movement in India can be called a “RTI Revolution’’. “The RTI makes it compulsory for officials to maintain their records for any form of perusal,” he says. “Also, several policy reforms were initiated because of activism through the RTI – all towards greater transparency of our government mechanisms.”
Pandya works with the Ahmedabad-based organization Paryavaran Mitra, meaning “Friends of the Environment’’. Paryavaran Mitra has filed over 300 RTI applications on various socio-environmental issues. Its major exposes included eleven mega-shopping malls being built in the SG Highway in Ahmedabad without necessary environment clearances. The Paryavaran Mitra RTI ensured the State Pollution Control Board acted to ensure compliance.
India appears one of the busiest countries in the world in using the RTI. Revelations through RTI applications appear almost daily in newspapers and other media. Indian RTI activists are giving a brisk new dimension to public access to information laws that first appeared in the world over 200 years ago. Sweden enacted the “Freedom of the Press Act’’ in 1776. Over 40 countries, including the USA, Japan, the UK, the European Union, Brazil and Pakistan, have passed RTI laws, and about 30 other countries are in the process of doing so.
As RTI gathers momentum as a powerful dimension to democracy, ensuring protection to RTI applicants must become the next urgent step. Stronger anti-corruption measures have to be part of a country with a trillion-dollar economy, and India is poised to become a two trillion-dollar-economy within five years. Confidentiality mechanisms must be built into the RTI process, ensuring protection similar to the Income Tax Department and the Anti-Corruption Bureaus offering anonymity to informants.
Associations such as the National RTI Forum offer one advice on how to handle RTI-related threats: have 15 others, better if they are scattered across the country, apply to the same public authority asking for the same information. If they too are threatened, then have 15 more people file the same RTI application.
Crooked governance cannot be cured without whistle-blowers, and the RTI Act is a loud, credible anti-corruption whistle. Despite threats to their lives, many RTI activists are fighting to protect our rights, to protect democracy. It’s time the country ensures they get protection in return.