TRIBUTE
TO NAR BAHADUR BHANDARI
When Sikkim Humbled India
The victory of Sikkim Parishad party in the Assembly polls in Sikkim in October 1979 is a reminder that if the Sikkimese people are united nothing is impossible. The Parishad, led by Nar Bahadur Bhandari, a Sikkimese patriot hailing from the majority Nepalese community, had the tacit backing of the Chogyal of Sikkim, Palden Thondup Namgyal, who was unceremoniously dethroned by anti-Sikkimese forces projecting themselves as ‘democrats’ in early 1975. Ever since the Indian-backed phony revolution for ‘democracy’ began in the former kingdom in early 1973, Bhandari and other nationalist leaders from all three ethnic communities – Lepchas, Bhutias and Nepalese – struggled for seven long years to deliver justice to the Sikkimese people. Bhandari’s Parishad won 16 of the 32 seats in the Assembly and with the help of an independent candidate formed the government and ousted pro-India party led by LD Kazi from power. Significantly, the independent legislator was the Late Lachen Rinpoche, who won from the lone Sangha seat.
The victory of Sikkim Parishad party in the Assembly polls in Sikkim in October 1979 is a reminder that if the Sikkimese people are united nothing is impossible. The Parishad, led by Nar Bahadur Bhandari, a Sikkimese patriot hailing from the majority Nepalese community, had the tacit backing of the Chogyal of Sikkim, Palden Thondup Namgyal, who was unceremoniously dethroned by anti-Sikkimese forces projecting themselves as ‘democrats’ in early 1975. Ever since the Indian-backed phony revolution for ‘democracy’ began in the former kingdom in early 1973, Bhandari and other nationalist leaders from all three ethnic communities – Lepchas, Bhutias and Nepalese – struggled for seven long years to deliver justice to the Sikkimese people. Bhandari’s Parishad won 16 of the 32 seats in the Assembly and with the help of an independent candidate formed the government and ousted pro-India party led by LD Kazi from power. Significantly, the independent legislator was the Late Lachen Rinpoche, who won from the lone Sangha seat.
The rest of the seats in the Assembly were won by Ram Chandra Poudyal’s
Congress (R) – 11 seats – and Nar Bahadur Khatiwada’s Prajatantra party – 4
seats. Poudyal won 11 seats mainly because he raised the demand for restoration
of Assembly seats reserved for Sikkimese Nepalese in the Assembly, which were
abolished in 1979. Kazi’s Sikkim Janata Party drew nil in the polls and Kazi
himself lost from the Dzongu constituency in North Sikkim. While Bhandari’s
party promised de-merger, Poudyal projected himself as a Nepali leader and
focused on the seat issue. Unlike Khatiwada, Poudyal did not want merger but
greater political power for the majority Nepalese. After the ‘merger’ in 1975 Khatiwada, too, revolted and said it was not the wishes of the Sikkimese people
to merge its country with India. While the result of the Assembly polls in 1979
was hailed as victory of the Sikkimese people the fact that the Sikkimese
people’s political leadership has failed to give justice to the people ever
since is Sikkim’s greatest tragedy.
(SIKKIM
Observer/Editorial)