Nagaland Post: Wednesday,
June 19, 2013.
The Sikkim
government has rubbished news reports that claimed it had been dragging it’s
feet in sending a resolution passed in its assembly on the formation of
Gorkhaland to the Union government.
Issuing a
clarification on its position on the resolution, a press release by the public
relations department of the Sikkim government read, “The resolution was
forwarded to GK Pillai, then Union home secretary by ND Chingapa, then chief
secretary of Sikkim vide (D.O. No.273/ CS/SKM/2011/562) on May 19, 2011.”
The
resolution in question was tabled and passed by the Sikkim Legislative Assembly
on March 31 and pledged moral support to the cause of carving out a separate
Gorkhaland state in the neighbouring Darjeeling Hills. The resolution held the
cause as genuine, legally justified and within the parameters of the
Constitution.
However, the
response to an RTI query has since revealed that despite more than two years to
its passage, the resolution has not yet reached the Union home ministry.
In its reply
to the RTI application by Bishnu Prasad Sharma, a pro-Gorkhaland activist, on
May 6, the Union home ministry disclaimed any knowledge of the resolution,
saying, “This ministry has not received any resolution from the Government of
Sikkim regarding the formation of a separate state of Gorkhaland.”
But, the
Sikkim government in its press release said that its home department has the
necessary papers to prove that the resolution had been sent to the Centre.
“The Government of Sikkim denies reports that
the resolution was not forwarded to the Government of India,” the release said.
“The position
of the government of Sikkim with regard to Gorkhaland continues to remain the
same and such baseless and unfounded allegations were probably made with the
intention to cause a rift between the peace loving people of Sikkim and
Darjeeling,” the release read.
“Nevertheless,
the state government would enquire with the Union ministry of home as to why it
said it didn’t get the resolution,” the release said.
The RTI
revelation came just days after Sikkim chief minister Pawan Kumar Chamling
openly batted for the Gorkhaland cause during a visit to Bengal on June 7.
Talking to
reporters, Chamling justified the demand for a separate state, saying, “I
believe that our country should have no fewer than 50 states, so they could
governed effectively.”
Chamling’s remarks followed a clear pitch for
statehood at the recent chief ministers’ conference in the Capital, with Sikkim
urban development minister DB Thapa voicing the demand for Gorkhaland.