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Monday, December 28, 2009

NEPALESE DEMAND FOR A SEPARATE STATE IN INDIA AND ITS IMPLICATIONS

Veteran Naxalite leader and the CPI-ML general secretary, Mr Kanu Sanyal has expressed support towards the ongoing agitation in the Darjeeling hills demanding a separate Gorkhaland state. The Maoist leader said, his party had favoured the Gorkhaland demand earlier and supports it now as well. “The Nepalis in Darjeeling have got every right to self-rule and the demand for Gorkhaland is very genuine.
But how genuine is that demand? The fact remains that the Nepalese are not the original inhabitants of Darjeeling. By all means, except for the few who were in Darjeeling before 1950, almost all of them are Nepalese citizens i.e., foreigners but due to the Indo-Nepal Treaty of 1950 were allowed to stay in India. Does that treaty gave them the right to demand a separate state?
If we look back in history Nepalese were in expansionary mode before. The Anglo-Nepalese War of 18141816, was fought between Nepal and the British East India Company as a result of aggresive attacks by Nepalese on both India and Tibet. Gorkhas were originated in West-central Nepal. The Gorkha army, after occupying all of eastern Nepal by 1773, invaded Sikkim in 1788. In the west, the Kumaon region and its capital Almora, were occupied by Gorkhas as well. To the north however, aggression against Tibet forced China in 1792 to attack Nepal and occupy areas very close to the capital Kathmandu. However, the Gurkha appetite of invasion was not stopped. In 1803, the Kingdom of Garhwal was occupied by the Gurkhas. Further west, even Kangra was occupied until in 1809, but Ranjit Singh the Sikh Emperor drove them out. Finally the British defeated them and drove them out of all these areas in India and Sikkim. In the Treaty of Sugauli in 1816, Darjeeling was returned back to Sikkim. According to the treaty, Nepal lost Sikkim, the territories of Kumaon and Garhwal, and most of the lands of the Tarai in Uttar Pradesh and Bihar. Darjeeling was annexed by the British Indian Empire in 1849. Immigrants from Nepal were recruited to work at construction sites, tea gardens, and on other agriculture-related projects; but their numbers were few and far between.After the independence of India in 1947, Darjeeling was merged with the state of West Bengal. The separate district of Darjeeling was established consisting of the hill towns of Darjeeling, Kurseong, Kalimpong and some parts of the Terai region. When Tibet was occupied by in 1950, thousands of Tibetan refugees settled across Darjeeling district. Darjeeling has seen significant growth in its population during and after 1950, when the Nepalese started coming in, especially since the 1970s. Annual growth rates reached as high as 45% in the 1990s, far above the national, state, and district averages.Nepalese were mainly labourers as they could work at high altitudes. They stayed on in India but they still identify themselves with Nepali music, culture, art and tradition.
During the 1980s, encouraged by some section of The Congress party, particularly Arjun Singh, who wanted to destabilise the leftist government of West Bengal, a violent movement by the Gorkha National Liberation Front started demanding a separate state. As a compromise Darjeeling Gorkha Hill Council was given semi-autonomous powers to govern the district. Later its name was changed to “Darjeeling Gorkha Autonomous Hill Council” (DGAHC), although Gurkha are not the original people but immigrants to Darjeling from Nepal.
Gurkhs are Nepalese, not Indian at all. The land in Darjeeling was always belonged to the Lepchas. This was true during the signing of the brotherhood treaty between Tibetans and Lepchas in the 1420s, during the Nepalese invasion of the 1760s, or when the East India Company took Darjeeling in 1816. However, the Indo-Nepal Treaty of 1950, Article VII, grants citizens of both countries to move, reside and own property and participate in trade and commerce in each other”s territory. Nepalese taking advantage of that treaty came to India to demand a separate state, but would Nepal tolerate a similar demand by the Indian citizens who are now settled in Nepal?
India is always a soft state without any strategy, without any policy and even it does not react but always give in to the demands by its neighbouring countries. In similar circumstances in 1950s when large numbers of Indians were settled in Burma and Sri Lanka, they got expelled and India had accepted them back without protests. Both Pakistan and Bangladesh have expelled almost all non-Muslims. However, now when India is facing the prospect of a very violent country Nepal, controlled by vicious Maoists closely linked with China, and expanding through the emigrations of its citizens, India”s response is to offer more autonomy to these foreign citizens in India and allow them to come to India more and more to take over even larger areas. Nepalese demand today is not restricted to the Darjeeling District any more; they are demanding practically the whole of north Bengal as a part of their new state of Gurkhaland. Nepalese immigrants already taken over Sikkim, where they are today more than 70 percent of the population.
Two questions should be asked. How long would it take these Nepalese through immigration to take over parts of Himachal Pradesh, Uttarachal, Uttar Pradesh and Bihar, which they had occupied during the early 19th century? What would be implications of that given the close relationship between the present government of Nepal and China for the security of India? The government of India does not care about these, but it is urging the West Bengal government to compromise more, although the creation of Gurkhaland as a Nepalese controlled area threatens the link between India and the whole of the North Eastern India.
-Dr. Dipak Basu

Tuesday, December 22, 2009

TOTAL BUNDH IN THREE DISTRICTS OF NORTH BENGAL :PEOPLE AGAINST GORKHALAND

Siliguri, Dec. 21: Members of organisations opposed to the statehood demand today burnt flags of the Gorkha Janmukti Morcha and picketed at different locations in Siliguri and Jalpaiguri and Cooch Behar districts as vehicles remained off the roads and establishments shut.

Amra Bangali, Bangla O Bangla Bhasa Bachao Committee and Dooars Terai Nagarik Mancha — three anti-Gorkhaland forums — had called a 24-hour strike in the plains today to protest the tripartite talks.

The bandh was partial in the two Dinajpurs while it impacted little in Malda. In Siliguri and the Dooars, educational institutions, banks, shops and business establishments were shut and poor attendance was reported from government offices.

At 11.15am, the bandh supporters intercepted a bus carrying staff members of the state electricity distribution company at Hashmi Chowk in Siliguri. Police intervened and arrested 11 of the protesters to clear the road and make way for the bus. Soon, another group of bandh supporters assembled at Darjeeling More, 2.5km away. Shouting slogans against the Morcha and protesting the alleged bid to divide the state, they set fire to 12 flags of the hill party that had been strung from lamp-posts. A force from the Pradhannagar police station, along with personnel of the Darjeeling district commando force, rushed to the spot and brought the situation under control. Five persons were arrested from the spot.

At 1pm, around 200 bandh supporters took out a rally on Hill Cart Road, carrying an effigy of Morcha president Bimal Gurung. They burnt the effigy near the Pradhannagar police station and also staged a demonstration, demanding the immediate release of the arrested supporters.

“We will not tolerate any division of the state and will protest as and when required,” said Mukunda Majumdar, the president of the Bhasha Bachao Committee.

“To protest against the tripartite talks, 11 supporters of our organisation have resorted to hunger strike at Hashmi Chowk and it will continue. We want the police to release our supporters immediately,” he added.

In Jalpaiguri, all establishments, except for government offices, were closed. In Cooch Behar, some of the block and rural offices were shut, as employees were absent.

At Gayerkata, 80km from Jalpaiguri town, more than 300 vehicles were stranded on NH31, the national highway connecting the Northeast, claimed Larry Bose, the president of the Nagarik Mancha. An effigy of Bimal Gurung was burnt at Alipurduar College Halt in Alipurduar town.

The effect of the strike was partial in North Dinajpur’s Raiganj with government buses plying on roads but shops and establishments remaining closed. In South Dinajpur, bandh supporters pelted a bus with stones near Patiram.

State urban development minister Asok Bhattacharya condemned the burning of Morcha flags by the bandh supporters. “However, we would like to urge upon the state and Centre to take note of the anti-Gorkhaland emotion,” he said.

Friday, December 18, 2009

SAY NO TO GORKHALAND : ADMNISTRATION MUST DEPLOY PARA MILITARY FORCES IN DOOARS & TERAI TO MAINTAIN LAW AND ORDER

The Dooars -Terai Nagarik Mancha (DTNM), which is opposed to statehood movements in north Bengal, has threatened a 24-hour bandh in the Dooars and Terai regions on 21 December. The DTNM is a platform of 12 pressure groups.

According to the DTNM convenor Mr Lari Basu, they would resist any proposal for the division of Bengal. “The Gorkha Jan Mukti Morcha is demanding Gorkhaland while the Greater Cooch Behar and Kamtapur parties Cooch Behar and Kamtapur states respectively. The situation is alarming,” Mr Basu pointed out.

Puzzled with the state government’s ‘sympathetic stand’ on the Gorkhaland issue he said: “The Centre and state government would once again hold a dialogue with the GJMM leadership on 21 December. The bandh would be observed to protest against the exercise,” Mr Basu said.

The DTNM today demonstrated at Kalchini, Hamiltonganj, Kalibari Maidan and held a rally at Malbazaar to protest against the Gorkhaland demand. “We would observe hunger strike on 25 December at Hamiltonganj and Malbazaar to protest against the separate state demands,” the leadership informed.

According to the DTNM assistant secretary, Mr Raju Bagchi, they would submit a memorandum to the district police administration to deploy paramilitary forces in the Dooars and Terai to maintain law and order.

“Our delegation met Mr Pranab Mukherjee and Miss Mamata Banarjee in October demanding development in the Terai and Doors and also to express our concern over the demands for division of Bengal. We hope, the Centre and state government would take positive steps to stop the separatist movements in north Bengal and work for the development of the region,” Mr Bagchi said.

Wednesday, July 8, 2009

Bharat Nirman - Rural Roads

To upgrade rural infrastructure, the Government of India has conceived a time-bound business plan under Bharat Nirman. It is a flagship programme for the country. A commitment of over Rs. 1,74,000 crores has been made to Bharat Nirman with the objective of unleashing the growth potential of our villages. As part of the programme, Government of India intends that by end of financial year 2008 – 2009, every village of over 1000 population, or over 500 in hilly and tribal areas, has an all-weather road.

To achieve the targets of Bharat Nirman, 1,46,185 kms. of road length is proposed to be constructed by 2009. This will benefit 66,802 unconnected eligible habitations in the country. To ensure full farm to market connectivity, it is also proposed to upgrade 1,94,132 kms. of the existing Associated Through Routes. A sum of approximately Rs. 48,000 crore is proposed to be invested to achieve this.

Tuesday, July 7, 2009

Disclosure of illegal black money deposited in Swiss Banks by Indian Clients

Delegation of the citizen’s of India representing the voice of all Indian citizen demand for disclosure of illegal black money deposited in Swiss Banks by their Indian clients through corrupt means.
(IT WAS SUBMITTED TO HON'BLE MR. HANS- RUDOLF MERZ, PRESIDENT OF SWITZERLAND CONFEDERATION, SWITZERLAND )
We understand that Switzerland is a country comparable to heaven on earth, in view of the entire population living on this universe. Indians read and propagate the beauty of Switzerland in terms of environment, in terms of governance system, in terms of rich culture, in observing truth in the Swiss people and an image of committed, ideal nations in the world. The humble re-presentation on behalf of common people of India is in benefit to all nations of the world, especially developing countries. We have come together to highlight the need of an urgent and serious consideration in demand that:Switzerland government should make immediate steps to stop this heinous Money Laundering being done by Corrupt Indians and then depositing the illegal money in banks of Switzerland. Due to the protection by the laws of “Swiss Bank Secrecy” and agreement with regard do “DUE DILLIGENCE” code of conduct by Swiss Banks- there is a large scope for the corrupt people or mafia to deposit unaccounted wealth in Swiss Banks without the disclosure of their identity. These kind of flexible laws of Swiss Banks have created several economic and security problems for other countries. In view to bring social and economic prosperity in India we demand a “FULL STOP” to money deposits by corrupt Indian citizens.If the Switzerland government is unwilling to act towards the noble and the ethical and the legal cause of prosperity to other nations, our delegation of common people will seek support of all the social organizations in India and world wide to endeavor, declaration of Switzerland as an “Economic Terrorist Country”.
If the Switzerland government ignores the issue of illegal money deposits by the corrupt Indians, we the people of India will initiate all humanitarian efforts including the involvement of United Nations to safe guard the generations of millions of Indian Citizen as well as the citizens of other countries of the world. We believe that the people of Switzerland will also agree and support the cause of declaration of illegal moneys deposited wide corruption in Swiss Banks. As Switzerland is an adorable country by the virtue of nature and the people of Switzerland, we also want our country to be as good and prosper like Switzerland. This money laundering by corrupt Indians has created and increased dense problems like Malnutrition, Poverty, Unemployment, Economic disparities and exploitation among hard working poor people. Therefore we demand that the illegal wealth deposited by corrupt Indians should be brought back for the health care, for education, removing debt, eradicating poverty among innocent deprived Indians.We understand that the involvement of Switzerland Banks in protection of money of the corrupt and mafia is being felt as a mutual benefit but this organized act is effecting the common and poor people of other countries as one of the biggest indirect crimes against their livelihood. Therefore we demand the amendments in “Swiss Banking Criminal Law”, the laws of “Swiss Bank Secrecy” and agreement with regard do “DUE DILLIGENCE” code of conduct by Swiss Banks.We the common people of India seek the earliest support of Switzerland government and the people of Switzerland to this cause of social well being for millions of people in India. We await the practical initiatives of the members of Switzerland confederation to prove the essence of humanitarian values in delivering the prospects of Peace to the People of world alike the country “Switzerland”.

By demand of :
All Citizen of India

Source from : Indian Social Security.

Thursday, July 2, 2009

कूचबिहार में चल रहे भूटानी व जाली नोट

पहले डुवार्स क्षेत्र में ही भूटानी नोटों ने अपना साम्राज्य कायम किया था। अब यह अवैध कारोबार कूचबिहार जिले तक फैल चुका है। इससे आम जनता सहित व्यवसायी वर्ग परेशान है। इन व्यवसायियों का कहना है कि भूटानी नोटों के प्रचलन से भारतीय नोट बाजार से लुप्त हो सकते हैं। खासतौर से बसों में भूटानी नोट का प्रचलन धड़ल्ले से हो रहा है। दिनहाटा के एक अर्थशास्त्री का कहना है कि भारतीय अर्थव्यवस्था को अंदर से खोखला करने के लिए यह अंतर्राष्ट्रीय तस्कर गिरोह की गंभीर साजिश है जिसे यदि समय पर रोका नहीं गया तो हमारे देश के लिए घातक साबित हो सकता है। दिनहाटा महकमा व्यवसायी समिति के सचिव राणा गोस्वामी एवं अध्यक्ष भवानी शंकर अग्रवाल ने कहा कि भूटानी व जाली नोटों का जाल बिछ जाने से काफी नुकसान हो रहा है। यदि प्रशासन ने इस पर समय रहते अंकुश नहीं लगाया तो एक समय आयेगा कि भारतीय नोट बाजार से गायब ही हो जायेंगे। उन्होंने इस संबंध में राष्ट्रीयकृत बैंकों व प्रशासन की भूमिका को लेकर भी सवाल खड़े किये। श्री गोस्वामी ने कहा कि शुरू शुरू में प्रशासन ने इस अवैध कारोबार पर रोक लगाने की कोशिश की लेकिन वह कोशिश जल्द ही काफूर हो गयी। इसके साथ ही बाजार में जाली नोटों के प्रवेश से आम जनता पहचान को लेकर असमंजस में है। जाली नोट ऐसे होते हैं कि उन्हें पहचानना एक मुश्किल काम है। जाली नोटों के कारोबारियों के साथ कई निर्दोष लोग भी इसकी चपेट में आ जा रहे हैं। इससे आम जनता की परेशानी बढ़ती जा रही है। इस संबंध में दिनहाटा कालेज के अर्थशास्त्र विभाग के अध्यापक साधन कर ने कहा कि जिस बड़े पैमाने पर जाली नोटों का बाजार में प्रवेश हो रहा है उस हिसाब से देश में मुद्रा स्फीति बढ़ने के सारे लक्षण विद्यमान हैं। उन्होंने आशंका व्यक्त की है कि प्रशासन को अंधेरे में रखकर जाली नोटों के तस्करों का एक गिरोह भारतीय अर्थव्यवस्था को पंगु करने की दिशा में साजिश रच रहा है। भूटानी नोटों के प्रवेश से दिनहाटा के बाजार में जरूरी चीजों के मूल्य में आयी अप्रत्याशित वृद्धि इसी का परिणाम हो सकती है। प्रशासन की लापरवाही व ढिलाई से आम जनता को और अंतत: पूरे देश को इसका खामियाजा भुगतना पड़ सकता है। जब इस बारे में एसडीओ इंद्रजीत पाल से पूछा गया तो उन्होंने कहा कि पुलिस को जाली एवं भूटानी नोटों के खिलाफ कार्रवाई करने का निर्देश दिया गया है।
(News Source : Dainik Jagaran)

Monday, June 22, 2009

NEED FOR ALL ROUND DEVELOPMENT OF DOOARS & TERRAI

Government must address to important issues of North Bengal for its extreme economic imbalances comprising various districts of North Bengal and special package should given for Dooars & Terai region. It is the most underdeveloped region in road connectivity and health infrastructure development. The Dooars region received till now no substantial development, while there are 14 locked-out tea gardens with malaria taking its toll every year.
1. Government must consider the demand of Medical College and an Engineering College at the site of central dooars within jalpaiguri district. North Bengal Industrial Development Corporation at Siliguri is extremely important.
2. The Uttar Banga Unnayan Parshad of North Bengal must get a statutory status with a corpus of Rs.750 crores from Plan allocation for flood management and infrastructure development. If Planning Commission must takes note of it, North Bengal would be a prosperous zone of State of West Bengal to provide enough support to the State of Sikkim and the entire North East since this is the gateway to North East.
3. East-West Corridor should be constructed through NH31C via Malbazar, Birpara and Hasimara.
4. Banahat should be declared as full-fledged BLOCK.
5. Full status of sub-divisional township should be extended to MALBAZAR.
6. Alipurduar should be declared a district. A demand has already been made by the various social organisations to the West Bengal Administrative Reforms Committee to elevate Alipurduar, stated to be the largest sub-division in the country, to a full-fledged district in West Bengal's northern region.
· 'The demand for elevation of Alipurduar sub-division to a district is 40-years-old, which is the largest sub-division, established in 1876, only four sq. Km smaller than the total area of Coochbehar district.
· Even the districts of Howrah, Hooghly, South and North Dinajpur are smaller than Alipurduar, the sub-divisional headquarter of Jalpaiguri district.
· There are six blocks, eight police stations and only one municipality in Alipurduar.
· Having 73,439.6 hectares of forest land, 52,566.4 hectares of tea garden and 49,768.5 hectares of agriculture land.
7. Need to implement Malaria Eradication Programme in Alipurduar Parliamentary Constituency, West Bengal effectively.
Dooars is facing mosquito menace and for the last several years DDT spray has not been done as a result of which on an average four people are dying every year in each village due to malaria. The medicines available in the market are not effective. The genuineness of medicine is also doubtful. Last year, hundreds of people died of malaria in this tribal area. We urge upon the Government to conduct an inquiry, whether the medicines being supplied by the Government is reaching to the people or not and the schemes to prevent these diseases are being properly implemented. The strict action should be taken against officials found guilty.
8. Integrated Separate Power Distribution authority is needed for Dooars because citizens are facing acute shortage of power. There is no any pre- load-shedding timetable. Today un-predicted load shedding is a daily phenomenon of life. Power distribution system should be outsourced and privatized.

Closed Tea Garden and suggestion for a Cooperative Model


As the problem of the closed and the abandoned tea plantations of west Bengal intensifies one solution that seems rather pragmatic and often passionately advocated is cooperative structuring of the ‘Cha Bagans’. Left to their own devices by the owners and visible apathy of the government towards them has left the common majdoor, with a few options to sustain human existence. Thus with little help coming their way the cooperative structuring and organizing of the workers seems a logical alternative. Indeed, argument of making the owners accountable has been seen has a more effective solution nonetheless it involves prolonged legal battles and no real security of the proper administration even on the owners return. The starving populations of the tea estates cannot be subjected to prolonged cruelty and need an immediate alternative.

The cooperative model has in fact been successful previously. In September of 1973 the owners of the Sonali Tea Garden, the Khemkas, abandoned it after stripping the garden of all its assets during their one year ownership. With no capital, no management experience and saddled with debts, the workers were in a desperate position the worker had not received remuneration for months and the plucking season was also over with the onset of winter. Disillusioned by the attitude of the political worker unions as well as the government they were left with little to choose, either abandon the garden as the former owners had done or stay on and try to save it from complete ruin. They decided to stay on. In September 1974 the workers formed their own cooperative. Named after the village where most of the workers live, the’ Saongaon Tea and Allied Plantation Workers’ Cooperative Limited’ was the first of its kind in the long history of tea plantations in India. Notably half the members of the Cooperative were women. The cooperative’s first act was to abolish wage discrimination between men and women. The first time women had ever been awarded the same wages as men on an Indian tea garden. Thus the cooperative brought with not just economic but social emancipation as well.

The garden made rapid progress over the next three years as ten more acres were planted with young tea bushes. Wages were raised by 30%, new equipment was purchased and the living conditions of the workers improved as the cooperative paid for house repairs, established a dispensary and school and installed a pure water supply. These impressive gains were made without the help of a professional manager. Supervision and administration have been carried out an elected nine person management committee of seven ordinary workers (including at least three women) and two clerical staff, reelected every 15 months. Most committee members are illiterate.

The most significant change was however on the psychological level. Initially many workers regarded the committee as a sort of paternalistic company, which would guide and look after them. This approach was the result of the old pattern conditioning of management worker relations of issuing orders and disciplining workers who refused to conform. The committee on the other hand consciously tried to involve all workers in confronting and overcoming managerial problems abandoning old management techniques of issuing charge sheets, show-cause notices and other cumbersome procedures. If a worker was slack or disobeyed orders, the committee tried to persuade him or her to change. This usually worked, but if the worker still refused to comply the case was brought before a meeting of the whole workforce, which decided on a suitable form of punishment. This procedure was very effective in maintaining work discipline and increasing production at the same time, workers felt a real involvement in running the cooperative. Remarkably, the cooperative received no financial assistance from banks or any other source, all its expenditure being met through the sale of green tea leaves. By the end of 1977 the workers had even managed to establish a substantial contingency fund. However the owners decided to come back to the plantation, now that it was a profit-yielding establishment. They challenged the registration of the cooperative by filling a suit in Calcutta High Court. Although the Sonali success story was cut short by the unwanted come back of the owners it still remains a firm indicator of the possibilities that a cooperative regime can obtain for the workers of the abandoned or closed plantations.

The process of globalisation through structural adjustment has adversely affected the working class throughout the world. Labour in most developing countries has suffered because the restructuring of industry has invariably led to unemployment due to the closure of ‘unprofitable’ industrial units.
Nowhere is this effect more prominent and more alarming than in the tea industry. In the circumstances, a viable alternative that has come up is that of a co-operative system of ownership and functioning. A co-operative society may be defined as an association for the purpose of joint trading, originating among the weak, and conducted always in an unselfish spirit, on such terms that all who are prepared to assume the duties of membership may share in its rewards in proportion to the degree in which they make use of their association. The first cooperative was started in England in 1844, a cooperative store set up by a handful of unemployed weavers at Toad Lane in Rochdale. The cooperative movement all over the world adopted the basic principles governing the functioning of this cooperative. These were: one vote for each member (and not for each share as in the case of joint stock companies), sale at market prices, division of profits among the shareholders on the basis of the shares each held, and limited interest on share capital.

The cooperative model is a successful business option that is being utilized by many economies with immense success. In North America especially in the agri-food industry the role of cooperatives is of undeniable significance. Producer cooperatives control nearly 80% of the grain handling, over 40% of dairy product manufacturing and nearly 30% of maple syrup handling and processing. In India the Amul project is the leading example of the success and effectiveness of cooperative models. The project was financed through community aid programme and loans from World Bank and was implemented during the period 1970-1996. This programme has benefited over eleven million farmer members covering over one lakh village cooperative societies setup under the umbrella of 170 district co-operative milk unions, resulting in the production of over hundred and ten lakh kg of milk per day. The success of a cooperative lies in the distinctive set of values that are inherent to such organizations distinguishing them from other forms of business enterprises.