Wednesday, July 20, 2011

GORKHALAND TERRITORIAL ADMINISTRATION


SIKKIM OBSERVER    July 16, 2011
GORKHALAND
 TERRITORIAL ADMINISTRATION

Tripartite pact to be signed on July 18
Darjeeling, July 15:The long-standing impasse in the Darjeeling Hills is heading towards a resolution on Monday (July 18) when the Centre, the West Bengal government and the Gorkha Janmukti Morcha (GJM) will sign a tripartite agreement for the
formation of the Gorkhaland Territorial Administration (GTA).
This autonomous authority for the Darjeeling Hills will replace the existing Darjeeling Gorkha Hill Council. The agreement will be signed in presence of Union home minister P. Chidambaram and chief minister Mamata Banerjee at Pintel village near Sukna, instead of Darjeeling town — which was Ms Banerjee’s original plan, due to rains and inclement weather.
Announcing this on Friday, the chief minister said: “The tripartite agreement will be signed on July 18. The Union home minister will come for this. Due to the bad weather, three-hour long journey to Darjeeling may not be possible, the agreement will be signed at Sukna, which also falls under the jurisdiction of Darjeeling. I have asked the chief secretary to also invite the Leader of the Opposition for the programme.”
Notable among those who will be present during the function are Darjeeling Lok Sabha MP Jaswant Singh and the Morcha’s three MLAs – Trilok Dewan, Harka Bahadur Chhetri and Rohit Sharma. William Chapramari, the Morcha-backed independent MLA from Kalchini will also be present during the occasion, Morcha General Secretary Roshan Giri said.
Referring to anti-Gorkhaland agitations in the plains of North Bengal, Mamata said, “Don’t attach much importance to nomenclature. It is nothing more than just few words. Some mischievous people are trying to play politics with this.”
However, Giri said, “We are happy with the inclusion of ‘Gorkhaland’ in the name of the new hill council.”
The bandh called by several organisations in North Bengal this week is aimed at opposing the use of the word ‘Gorkhaland’ in the new administrative set-up and likely inclusion of Gorkha-dominated areas in the Dooars in the GTA.
Sikkim Liberation Party calls for regional parties’ meet on common front
Observer News Service
Gangtok, July 15: In its first major move to unite the Sikkimese under one banner to fight against vested interests in the State the recently-formed Sikkim Liberation Party (SLP) has called for a meeting of regional political parties and social organisations here on Sunday.
Notable among those invited for this crucial meet to form a common platform of pro-Sikkim-Sikkimese forces in the State are Sikkim National People’s Party (SNPP), Sikkim Himali Rajya Parishad Party (SHRPP), Sikkim Bhutia-Lepcha Apex Committee (SIBLAC) and All Sikkim Self-Employed and Unemployed Association.
The Sikkim United (SU), a new political outfit floated by some intellectuals in 2008, which has also been invited for the meet, will not participate in the deliberations.
In a letter to SLP chief Duk Nath Nepal, a representative of the SU said the organization is “non-existent” and cannot take part in Sunday’s meeting.
Nepal, who played a significant role in backing pro-democracy forces in early 1990s led by Pawan Chamling, says people are disenchanted with the present dispensation and are looking for “change”.
“If like-minded people come together we can fulfill the aspirations of the people,” Nepal told Sikkim Observer.
‘SU’ CONTROVERSY
I’m clean, Lama tells Rai
By A Staff Reporter
Gangtok, July 15: Reacting to Lok Sabha MP PD Rai’s allegations against him, Sikkim University Vice-Chancellor Mahendra P Lama said he was clean and that his institution’s functioning was open for public scrutiny.
Lama said the Sikkim University is a “non-political national institution” established to transform the quality of higher education in the State.
The university functions in a transparent manner and as per the norms laid down by a Act of the Parliament, Lama said while adding that the ruling Sikkim Democratic Front’s allegations against him was “unfortunate, regrettable and malicious.”
Rai and former Lok Sabha MP and SDF spokesperson last week not only accused Lama of being inefficient, political and uncooperative but also alleged that he was the “root cause” of all problems faced by the university.
Stop interfering in SU affairs, Upreti tells SDF
Observer News Service
Gangtok, July 15: Former Education Minister and senior Congress leader KN Upreti has urged the State Government and ruling Sikkim Democratic Front not to interfere in the functioning of the Sikkim University and allow it to function independently.
Lending his voice to the SU land acquisition controversy, Upreti, while reacting to press statements made by ruling party MP PD Rai on the issue, said in a press statement that delay in land acquisition of the SU at Yangang, south Sikkim, is due to “ego clash” between Chief Minister Pawan Chamling and SU Vice-Chancellor Mahendra P. Lama.
Referring to Rai’s statement that only “sycophants” would be made SU VC, Upreti said such remarks were “distasteful” and “irresponsible.”
The Congress leader said the ruling elite cannot “dictate terms” to the SU and “interfere in its administration every now and then.”
Central universities such as the SU should be “allowed to function independently and their independent character should not be diluted,” Upreti said.
The former minister also revealed that establishment of a Central University in the State was initiated when he was the Education (now HRD) Minister during the NB Bhandari-led Sikkim Sangram Parishad government (1985-1994)
Prince Charmling woos reluctant Bhandari
Jigme N Kazi
Gangtok, July 15: Chief Minister Pawan Chamling’s gracious gestures towards his arch political rival, former chief minister and chief of the Congress unit in the State, Nar Bahadur Bhandari, will certainly lead to many speculations.
During a function on Bhanu Jayanti celebrations in Geyzing, west district, on Wednesday, Chamling openly acknowledged Bhandari’s contribution towards inclusion of Nepali language in the 8th schedule of the Constitution of India.
For Chamling to give credit to Bhandari for constitutional recognition of Nepali language on an important day for Nepalese in general makes one, particularly the critics of both men, very suspicious of the real motive behind the act.
Some would be led to believe that Chamling was being large-hearted and magnanimous on a historic day when Nepalese all over the world remember the contribution made by Bhanubhakta Acharya towards development of Nepali language and literature.
But when Chamling goes even further and openly expresses his desire during the public function to name the Degree College at Tadong, below Gangtok, as Nar Bahadur Bhandari College then those who are suspicious and speculative have some basis to feel doubtful about Chamling’s growing softness towards Bhandari or vice-versa.
“If Bhandari gives his consent we will name the college after him,” said Chamling in his public address during the function.
Those who witnessed the two together at the opening of the Mayfair Resort near Gangtok two years back in June 2009 say that the two were actually having a political affair at the resort which once was Bhandari’s residence.
Dissidents within Bhandari’s Congress party openly point out that the former chief minister is going soft on the present chief minister on the corruption issue. They say the CBI investigation on corruption charges against Chamling & Co, initiated by Congress leaders, is given a quiet burial by Bhandari & Co.
All said and done Chamling still considers Bhandari to be his main rival. The Congress chief is shrewd enough to realize that if he gets flawed by Chamling’s constant wooing he would be committing political suicide. At best he can extract maximum advantage from Chamling’s overtures without tarnishing his own image. But is he capable of doing this?
Editorial
BHANUBHAKTA  ACHARYA
Pen Mightier Than Sword
Nepalese owe much to the ruling Shah Dynasty of Nepal for unifying the country into one political entity in 1769. However, Nepal’s influence in the region began to wane at the time of British intervention in Himalayan affairs in the beginning of the 19th century. The Anglo-Nepalese war in 1814 led to the signing of the Treaty of Segauli in 1816, which resulted in loss of much of Nepal’s territory acquired during the Shah dynasty. During the 104 years’ rule of the Ranas, which began three decades after the Treaty, the kings of the Shah dynasty were reduced to being titular heads. Even when the anti-Rana movement in Nepal succeeded in installing King Tribhuvan Bir Bikram Shah to the throne in 1950-51 the monarch remained a figurehead as the popular demand of the people favoured democracy. Nepal’s experiment with constitutional monarchy ended in May 2008 when the Maoist communist-dominated Parliament put an end to the 240-year-old Shah Dynasty founded by Nepal’s first king Prithvi Narayan Shah in 1769.
     Inspired by the simple act of a grass-cutter, Bhanubhakta, regarded as Nepal’s first poet, firmly resolved to do something worthwhile with his life. “My life is worthless if the memory of my existence fades away,” he said in one of his poems. His devotion and determination to do something real and lasting for the people led him to translate the great epic Ramayana from Sanskrit into Nepali language. Born to a Brahmin family in 1814 in Tanahu district in Nepal, Bhanubhakta received an excellent home education with a strong leaning towards Hinduism from his grandfather. Till Bhanubhakta appeared in Nepal’s literary landscape Sanskrit dominated most of the written texts of South Asia and its influence was particularly strong in Nepal. Brahmins were the teachers, scholars and priests of the society by virtue of their caste and education. Their education was Sanskrit-oriented since most religious texts of the Hindu religion were in that language.    
    Through the Nepali version of the Ramayana the poet Bhanubhakta killed two birds with one stone; he not only introduced Hinduism to the common man but also successfully unified the Nepalese, many of whom had their own dialects and practised shamanism, as one social entity. Those who read the Ramayana in Nepali graduated to studying other holy scriptures of Hinduism - "Upanishads" and "Vedas." Thus Nepali language and the Hindu religion aided the ruling class in Nepal to build a solid foundation of Nepalese identity and unity. The Shah Dynasty in Nepal, which founded the Hindu Kingdom and expanded its territory through the power of the sword, is no more; nevertheless, the might of Bhanubhakta Acharya’s pen will live on and on.

Wednesday, July 13, 2011

SDF targets Sikkim University VC

HIMALAYAN GUARDIAN     July 13, 2011
SDF targets  Sikkim University VC
“Lama root cause of all controversies”
Himalayan News Network
Gangtok, July 12: The ruling Sikkim Democratic Front’s (SDF) Lok Sabha MP, P D Rai, has accused the Sikkim University Vice-Chanceller, Mahendra P. Lama, of failing to work in cooperation with the State Government in the speedy completion of the university campus in Yangang, south Sikkim.
Briefing reporters here last week, Rai and former Sikkim Lok Sabha MP and SDF spokesperson Bhim Dahal said the delay in transfer of university campus land in Yangang is mainly due to failure of the authorities to meet the rehabilitation demands of the land oustees.
“The process of rehabilitating 57 families is yet to be completed. The oustees will not vacate until they are rehabilitated,” Rai said.
The two SDF leaders are also not too happy about non-involvement of Sikkimese in the University’s academic and governing council. The two have also taken a serious view of Lama’s alleged delaying tactics to allow a B. Ed College in Soreng and a degree college in Geyzing, west Sikkim, to get affiliation.
“Has he come to stop or bring education in Sikkim? Is he for the growth of students or to put obstacles in every path?” questioned Rai.
The two not only accused Lama of behaving more like a politician than an educationist, but have also questioned the manner in which the University spent Rs 1.3 crore in the admission process this year. They alleged that out of the total of 225 students who got admission into the University only 25 students are from Sikkim.
Reacting to the allegations, Lama said he was merely “stating the facts” when commenting on the slow pace of land transfer at the University campus.
“We are stating the facts of these two issues and we don’t want to enter into any controversies,” Lama said while also referring to allegations that he was delaying the affiliation process. 
“The norms for affiliation are clear and we have to go by the UGC norms. We communicated these requirements with the State authorities and they were nil on these norms,” Lama added.
Referring to his frequent visits abroad and outside the State, Lama said, “They should be happy that whenever I go to Delhi or abroad, I am promoting Sikkim along with the university free of cost. These questions are beyond the purview of those who are asking such questions.”
Lama was clearly reacting to Rai, who is close to Chief Minister Pawan Chamling, who alleged: “The VC has failed to build the institution as you need to spend a lot of time to nurture a brand new institution but he spends most of his time touring foreign countries and works with a political agenda which is evident from the speeches he gives in the neighbouring region.” Rai added, “He spends around 90 days only in a year in the university.”
Observers said Lama, who hails from Darjeeling, has fallen out with Chamling, who initially patronized him. Chamling is originally from Yangang and is keen to develop his native village. About 300 acres of land has been acquired for the university in Yangang.
     Meanwhile, Rai and Dahal in yet another press conference held here on Monday said Lama was the “root cause” of all controversies at the university.
They also accused the Opposition of making “anti-people” and “politically-motivated” statements on the SU controversy.
CONG, BJP JOINS SIKKIM UNIVERSITY CONTROVERSY
Rahul Gandhi wants update on SU: Bhandari
Gangtok, July 12: It is not only the Chamling Government which has focused its attention on the alleged lapses at Sikkim University the Opposition, too, has joined the tirade against the authorities on slow pace of construction work at the university campus.
According to former Chief Minister and SPCC President N B Bhandari, Congress General Secretary Rahul Gandhi has sought the party’s report on Sikkim University. Bhandari said the spat between Lama and the ruling party was “unfortunate.”
While Vinod Chettri, President of the Congress party’s students’ wing, National Students’ Union of India (NSUI), has been asked to submit a report on the controversy shrouding the university, State Youth Congress leader Avinash Yakha, who is from Yangang, is likely to lead a delegation of youths to New Delhi to brief the party high command on the issue.
Meanwhile, Sikkim BJP President Padam Chettri in a press statement said the present stalement at the university reflected the Chamling Government’s incompetence and lack of concern for the student community.
Chettri said the central party leadership is likely to seek President Pratibha Devi’s intervention to resolve all contentious matters of the university.
Dissident ruling party leader and former MLA, Bhoj Raj Rai, who is a close confidant of former minister and SDF MLA PS Tamang, looked upon by many as the chief-minister-in-waiting, in a press statement said the Chamling Government is not at all serious about providing land to the university in Yangang and thereby causing unnecessary delay in completion of the university campus.
editorial
BIG DAMS
Concern Over Brahamaputra
The new Chinese anti-drought project, which envisages the diversion of the Brahmaputra to the arid Xinjiang region, is raising serious concern in India and Bangladesh. Although Beijing has assured that there will be no negative impact on the ecosystem in the central basin or downstream of the river, the two countries instead fear for the people who live along its course.
China had already announced a first project concerning the construction of a dam on the Tsangpo (the upper reaches of the Brahmaputra), with a view to creating the world's largest hydroelectric plant with a capacity of 510MW. But this new plan is causing concern in India and Bangladesh. Some Indian satellites have photographed the construction of several dams along the tributaries of the river. According to some experts, the very minor deviation of these courses will slow the flow of the Brahmaputra, causing damage to local populations as in the case of dams on the Mekong.
The Brahmaputra, one Asia’s major rivers, has its source in south-western Tibet. Nearly 3 thousand kilometers long, it winds its way through the Himalayas, and then through India (Arunachal Pradesh, Assam) to Bangladesh where it flows into the Bay of Bengal. India and China, therefore, has the shared responsibility to act wisely and tread cautiously in dealing with Brahmaputra.
Fifth Schedule safeguards Darjeeling hill people
          The Gorkhaland shadow boxing is proved a sham and farce, peculiar but normal to politicians of the day. The Gorkha Janmukti Morcha leadership has accepted a setup within Bengal, outside the “safeguard” of the Fifth Schedule - Article 244(1). The Fifth and Sixth Schedules seems to be the only two legality for new state formation conspicuously inserted in 36 numbers, “Excluded and Partially Excluded Areas”, phrased in Govt. of India Act 1935 and Order 1936.    
    The important feature of 1935 Act was to indicate E&PEA as distinct areas outside the administrative reforms, thereby governed as if the territories were outside British India under the Chief Commissionership as Scheduled Districts (Local Laws Extent Act) 1874. The 1873 Bengal Eastern Frontier Regulation (Inner Line Permit) was restricted to non-Regulated areas to protect the areas, now removed since 1990. Why?
The Stafford Cripps Mission 24 March 1946 British aimed to discuss and finalize plans for transfer of power from British Raj to Indian leadership. Before independence, in a statement on 16th May 1946, “the Cabinet Mission reiterated need for special attention of the Constituent Assembly to these excluded and partially excluded areas and tribal areas while drafting the new Constitution of India.”  In the draft Constitution 1946-48 the E&PEA were transferred into Fifth Schedule -Article 244 (1) and Sixth Schedule - Article 242(2) and Art. 275 (1) with their safeguards intact forwarded by A.V.Thakkar Sub Committee 1947 deliberating on “Excluded and Partially Excluded Areas (other than Assam)”.
   Darjeeling District as Partially Excluded Area “was felt safeguards were necessary in the interest of the hill people.”  In West Bengal 1952-56 “under Rule 4 (1) of the Fifth Schedule of the Constitution” Tribes Advisory Council was formed. The State has denied the ‘hill peoples’ safeguard. (Kayteepee)
Draft pact on Gorkhaland Territorial Administration signed
Tripartite meet to be held soon
Himalayan News Network
Darjeeling, July 12: The West Bengal government and the Gorkha Janamukti Morcha on Friday signed on a draft of an Memorandum of Agreement (MoA), which was forwarded to the Centre to lay the grounds for a tripartite meeting to be held either in Delhi or Darjeeling soon.
According to the agreement, signed by Home Secretary G D Gautama and GJM general secretary Roshan Giri, the new administrative body will be known as the Gorkhaland Territorial Administration.
West Bengal chief secretary Samar Ghosh said they have sent the MoA to the Centre which will study it and take a decision about holding the tripartite meeting. "The chief minister wants the tripartite meeting to be held in Darjeeling. She also wants the Centre to hold the tripartite meeting as early as possible," Ghosh said.
The State government has requested the Centre for holding tripartite talks to put a seal on the final memorandum of agreement at the earliest, preferably on July 12 or 13.
 “We forwarded the draft of the MoA and the papers of the financial package to Delhi. The Centre will scrutinise the draft and offer the financial package,” Ghosh added.
The Gorkhaland Territorial Administration will not have any legislative power and won’t be authorised to collect taxes, according to the Chief Secretary. “But it will be authorised to collect levy from the tea gardens,” he added.
The sensitive territory issue of the GJM has been referred to a nine-member joint verification committee, which will submit a report before the elections are held in the hills this year.
A Bill will be moved in the State Assembly after the signing of the memorandum of agreement. The Board of administrators set up for the Darjeeling hills will run the administration till elections to the new body are held.
 “The outstanding areas of dispute have been settled,” Giri said after a meeting with the Chief Secretary and Home Secretary.
He was accompanied by a senior member of the Studies Forum from Darjeeling, L. B. Pariyar.
 “The tripartite meeting to finalise the memorandum will be held within seven to 10 days,” Giri added.
INTERVIEW/Jonathan Glancey
‘Most Nagas do not want the Indian state of Nagaland’
One of India’s smallest states is also among its biggest conundrums. With a history as chequered and intriguing as its topography, Nagaland is a bewildering mosaic of social and geopolitical complexities. In his book Nagaland: A Journey to India’s Forgotten Frontier, British journalist Jonathan Glancey tries to take a closer look at Nagaland. He shares his findings with Harsh Kabra:
cut out the black portion, pix one col
Q: Why a book on Nagaland?
A: Because Nagaland is such a forgotten corner of the world. It isn’t at all well known even in India, and it is much misunderstood. I had known about the Naga Hills from childhood. For me, at that stage of life, and as someone with a great love for India, this was a Secret Garden or Lost Kingdom, a land from a Kipling story. As I grew up, I remained curious. When I finally went to Nagaland in the early 1980s, I had the opportunity - not as a journalist - to tell the story of a people and a place that deserve recognition. I have been astonished by how little people in India know about Nagaland and its extraordinary history. Here, aside from a fascinating people with a rich culture, is a land that has been a junction box for political ambitions that have shaped the world. This is where the Japanese nearly invaded India in 1944. This is where China might have invaded in 1962. For any number of reasons, Nagaland matters.

Q: Didn’t you come across varying, even contradictory, narratives of history?
A: I would say that the vast majority of Naga people want independence from India. Being forced into Indian citizenship when the state of Nagaland was created in 1963 only strengthened the resolve of most Nagas. From then on, to fight for Nagalim - the dream of a greater Nagaland embracing all Naga tribes across state and international borders - meant being a subversive or traitor. This has not gone down well with Naga people. Of course, there are those who do well working with the federal government and in modern business, and these people - a small minority - do have a less intransigent view of where Nagaland stands in relation to India.
Q: What is at the root of the Naga scepticism towards India?
A: Nagas were promised their freedom by Mahatma Gandhi. This offer was revoked, and brutally so as events proved, by Jawaharlal Nehru and his successors. So there is a lack of trust. Nagas come from a very different background and culture. They still want their own country, much, perhaps, as the Irish did when ruled by Britain.
Q: Isn’t Nagaland more at peace now with its current identity?
A: Nagas are very happy with the idea of being Nagas; their attachment to their beautiful hills is profound. India cannot truly understand Nagaland because most Nagas do not want the Indian state of Nagaland. If more Indians were able or willing to travel through Nagaland, I think they would understand. After all, Indians worked hard for their independence. They, of all people, should understand the dream of an independent Nagaland.
Q: Can modern India’s economic might counterpoise the Naga desire for independence?
A: The desire for independence is deep-rooted. The Look East policy, driving economic development into Nagaland and the northeast generally, has helped many people in a matter-of-fact way. Yet, whenever I speak with Naga people, no matter how seemingly integrated into modern Indian life and even the global economy, I hear a longing for an independent Nagalim. And, as Nagas, whether villagers or professors in North America, told me, Nagaland is not for sale.(Times of India)
Amazing Nepal: Natural & Cultural diversity
Yangchen Namgyal
Nepal may be passing through a long phase of political instability but the richness of the country’s natural and cultural diversity is the former Hindu kingdom’s main strength and a source of economic sustainability of the people.
For the ordinary Nepali people who live in the countryside it does not matter who rules or misrules in Kathmandu. They continue with their traditional farming and trading activities which is a constant source of their revenue. Despite two decades of political instability and bloody revolution of the Maoists tourists still continue to flow in giving the people an opportunity to increase their earning.
Its majestic snow-peaked mountains, rugged terrains, deep valleys, and the fertile terai region, coupled with renowned pilgrimage centres for both Hindus and Buddhists, give Nepal an edge over other Himalayan region as far as the tourism sector is concerned.
Added to these natural attractions is the ethnic diversity of its people who still have a simple lifestyle like their ancestors. The fear is that the invasion of ‘progress’ in all its diversity may deprive ordinary Nepalese of their rich and unique cultural heritage.


         




Thursday, July 7, 2011

BLACK MONEY No Escape For The Corrupt

Sikkim Observer July 9, 2011
Editorial
BLACK MONEY
No Escape For The Corrupt
The Supreme Court’s initiative on recovery of black money stashed abroad by Indian nationals is a stinging indictment of the UPA Government’s handling of the issue. It clearly distrusts the government’s lackadaisical attitude towards investigation of illegal wealth in foreign banks. While the court has questioned “serious lapses” in the probe against the culprits it has also noted that “possible criminal nexus” and “threats to national security” were “not even attempted” by the government appointed High-Level Committee (HLC) headed by the Union Revenue Secretary.
To ensure that the newly-appointed Special Investigation Team (SIT)’s efforts to recover unaccounted black money stashed abroad is successful the Supreme Court has rightly directed all State Governments, Central and State agencies to extend full cooperation during the probe. The SIT will not only prepare periodic reports on the subject but will also create a strong mechanism within the system to detect and tackle unaccounted monies stashed abroad. Thus the new probe agency will not only expose the corrupt but will also ensure that such crimes are not repeated.
When Baba Ramdev made various attempts to bring black money home the UPA government and the ruling Congress party made a lot of fuss about the yoga guru’s integrity. Instead of probing into the complaint on black money and rampant corruption in the administration and outside of it the authorities targeted the complainant. Will those who went after Baba Ramdev now target the Supreme Court Judges who want the SIT to clamp down heavily on those responsible for stashing black money abroad? Obviously not. They will now be legally bound to follow the orders of the highest court of the land. Now that the judiciary has come to the aid of civil society will our politicians gracefully accept our parliamentary system of checks and balances?
Centre to seek legal opinion on new Gorkhaland council
Observer News Service
Darjeeling, July 8: The formation of Gorkhaland Autonomous Authority may take more time as the Centre is keen on seeking legal opinion on the issue before signing the much-awaited tripartite agreement.
 Chief Minister Mamata Banerjee was eager to clinch a deal with Gorkha leaders and sign the deal this week but this may take some time.
While Mamata wants to pass a Bill on setting up the new body in the next session of the Assembly Union Home Ministry reportedly wants to seek the opinion of Attorney General Goolam E Vahanvati on the issue.
 Sources said Union Home Minister P Chidambaram has also favoured getting a legal opinion.
A final decision on the agreement would be conveyed to the state government only after it is confirmed that there is no unconstitutionality connected to it.
While Mamata wants holding direct elections to elect the proposed Gorkhaland Autonomous Authority, which will have legislative, financial, executive and administrative powers, the Home Ministry wants first to look into the constitutional validity of giving so much power to the interim set-up, particularly when Gorkha Janmukti Morcha (GJM) leadership views the new council as a stepping stone to achieving a separate state of Gorkhaland.
The inclusion or omission of Gorkha-inhabited of Doars and Terai in the new body is also a contentious issue for all parties concerned.
As Opposition leaders in the hills openly criticize Morcha leaders for “sellout” the political upheaval in Andhra Pradesh for Telangana will surely add fuel to the fire for those who do not wish to give up the demand for Gorkhaland.
 “We are keeping a close watch on the Telangana developments,” said Roshan Giri, GJM General Secretary.
“If Telangana is constituted, Gorkhaland has to be constituted too. The GJM should learn a thing or two from the sacrifices made by the Telangana leaders (MP and MLAs.) The GJM MLAs should immediately place a “Gorkhaland” Bill in the Bengal Assembly,” said Communist Party of Revolutionary Marxist (CPRM) spokesperson Govind Chettri.

HOLLYWOOD Entertainment
Hollywood actress Michelle Yeoh deported from Burma

Yangon, July 8: The military-backed government of Burma has deported Hollywood actress Michelle Yeoh, who stars as pro-democracy leader Aung San Suu Kyi in an upcoming movie, officials said.
The Malaysian actress arrived in the country's main city, Rangoon, on June 22 and was deported the same day because she was on a blacklist, a government official said.
The official, who declined to be identified because he was not authorized to speak to the press, did not say why Yeoh was on the list. But Burma's repressive government has routinely rejected visa requests of journalists and perceived critics for years, Time magazine reported.
Suu Kyi spokesman Nyan Win confirmed Yeoh was deported but had no other details.
The Luc Besson movie about Suu Kyi's life, "The Lady," is due out later this year, and Yeoh has said she hopes her portrayal of Suu Kyi will raise awareness about the Nobel Peace Prize winner's story.
Suu Kyi, 66, spent most of the last two decades detained by the former military junta. She was released last year, just days after an election that her party boycotted and in which she was barred from being a candidate.
The vote was the nation's first in 20 years, and in March, the junta handed power to a civilian government. But critics say little has changed and the new government is merely a front for continued rule by the army, which has been in power here since 1962.
Yeoh visited Burma in December and spent time with Suu Kyi for the movie, which was filmed in neighboring Thailand.
Yeoh, a former Miss Malaysia, shot to international fame when she costarred with Pierce Brosnan in the 1997 James Bond film "Tomorrow Never Dies" as a tough but beautiful Chinese spy. She has also starred in "Crouching Tiger, Hidden Dragon" and "Memoirs of a Geisha."
KHANDRO TSERING CHODRON
Female Tibetan Buddhist Master
She was truly a hidden treasure in the Himalaya
MICHAELA HAAS
Wherever she went, whether it be in a small park in India, or a hospital in Europe, inadvertently people would feel drawn to her. Not knowing anything about her, people would inquire as to who the petite Asian lady in the wheelchair was, noting they felt a special presence.
In his bestselling book "The Tibetan Book of Living and Dying," her nephew, the Tibetan Buddhist teacher Sogyal Rinpoche, refers to Khandro Tsering Chödro as "the greatest woman master of our day." In her, he goes on to say, "you see very clearly what years of the deepest devotion and practice can create out of the human spirit. Her humility and beauty of heart, and the shining simplicity, modesty, and lucid, tender wisdom of her presence are honored by all Tibetans, even though she herself has tried as far as possible to remain in the background, never to push herself forward, and to live the hidden and austere life of an ancient contemplative."
Khandro Tsering Chödron passed away in France on May 30, 2011. She was one of the few Tibetans whose unusual biography could still offer a glimpse into what life in an untouched, intact Tibet had been like. Born in a small village in the mountains of Eastern Tibet around 1929, early black-and-white pictures show a beautiful, young woman standing tall but with a slightly shy gaze. Those who knew her during those years say she was gentle and reserved, but at the same time endowed with a somewhat wild, playful and independent spirit.
Her life story, populated by warriors and princesses, is so full of unexpected turns and dramatic events that it seems more like a mythical, yet sometimes cruel, fairytale. In 1949, she became the wife of Jamyang Khyentse Chökyi Lodrö (1893-1959), the most revered Tibetan master of the 20th century. Authority on all traditions and holder of all main lineages, he was the heart of the non-sectarian movement in Tibet. In Tibetan Buddhism, the consort of a great master is regarded as his equal, and thus students worldwide revered her just as they did him.
Yet Khandro's happiness with Chökyi Lodrö in Tibet lasted only for six years. The year after their marriage, Chinese troops started to pile up at the borders. In 1955, just before the Chinese began to crack down on Tibetan masters and monasteries, Chökyi Lodrö and Khandro slipped out of their grip, disguised as ordinary pilgrims. Leaving almost all their possessions behind, they crossed on foot and horseback over the rugged terrain of the Himalayas. Their path took them from the high, arid plateau of Tibet, across mountain trails, glaciers and snow-bound passes into the kingdom of Sikkim.    
     Not long after their arrival in the safety of Sikkim, Chökyi Lodrö's health deteriorated. His death was eventually to occur just after receiving news that the three great monasteries of Tibet -- Sera, Drepung and Ganden -- had been occupied by the Chinese. His remains were enshrined in a small golden structure in the Sikkimese Royal Palace. Khandro was only about 30 years old at the time, but stayed on for decades, living near the shrine, spending most of her time in prayer. "She was still very young when Khyentse Rinpoche passed away," says her friend Dagmola Sakya, herself married to the great Tibetan master Dagchen Rinpoche, "but she remained at the palace temple, and didn't want to move. It shows how strong she is, a really extraordinary human being." Khandro always insisted that there was no separation between her and Khyentse Chökyi Lodrö.
Khandro is the Tibetan word for dakini, or embodiment of feminine wisdom, and her name, Tsering Chödron, literally means "lamp of the teachings and long life." She was unanimously regarded as one of the most realized female Buddhist practitioners of our times. She was what Tibetans call a hidden master because her whole life she refused to sit on thrones and preach with words, yet taught by her sheer presence, beauty and example.
Some might have mistaken her humility for lack of self-esteem. But I believe her unassuming silence goes far beyond anything that could be labeled shyness. Buddhist practice, understood in all its profundity, is not about being special, it is about being truly natural. In Tibetan Buddhism, the absence of any sense of ego is the greatest and most fundamental accomplishment. It added grace and dignity to everything Khandro did. Despite her humbleness and silence, people could not help but be moved by her sheer presence.
Occasionally, a splinter of Khandro's sharp wisdom sparked through a casual conversation. Khandrowas always completely present in the moment, exhaling purity, innocence and love. Despite her status, she never put on any makeup or elaborate jewelry. Usually she wore a traditional floor-length wraparound Tibetan dress, her hip-long gray hair strung back in a knot topped with a green knitted cap above. The princess of Sikkim had knitted it for her, and Khandro was rarely seen without it. Her complete lack of vanity brought with it an immediate ease and poise when in her presence. One never felt intimidated around her -- only in awe, as if encountering a powerful, yet gentle force of nature.
For more than 30 years, Khandro lived by herself in Chökyi Lodrö's shrine room in Sikkim, before her nephew, Sogyal Rinpoche, brought her and her sister to Europe to ensure better health care. Thus, Khandro had come full circle. From living like a revered master's wife in the snow mountains of Tibet, to being a refugee in India, she finally found her home at Rigpa, one of the most influential Buddhist communities in the West. Though Khandro did not teach in a formal way, what she did say would often be so penetratingly clear that it became prophetic.
Her sense of humor was legendary. One of the first English words she picked up was "naughty girl" and she liked to use it whenever she had her own mind about something. Her caretakers admired her playful nature, and none of them ever heard her complain about all the friends and fortunes she lost in Tibet. When other Tibetans lamented the terrible loss that has befallen Tibet, she simply stood up and walked away. She passed away like a great practitioner -- lucid and aware, surrounded by her students and family. The light of the teachings shines on through her example and inspiration.
Industries dept under vigilance scanner
Observer News Service
Gangtok, July 8: The Sikkim Vigilance Department has registered a prima facie case against higher officials of Commerce and Industries Department and seven others, including NGOs and private parties, for indulging in corrupt practices.
They have allegedly siphoned Rs 1.25 crore meant for socio-economic development of ST & SC candidates, according to haalkhabar news portal.
The said amount was to be used for imparting capacity building training under Tribal Sub-Plan and Scheduled Class Sub-Plan of Social Justice Empowerment and Welfare Department for the year 2009-10.
Former Director and Assistant Director of Commerce and Industries Department, M/s Vision Sikkim Industries Pvt. Ltd., M/s Sikkim Motor Training and Engineering Institute., Scheduled Caste Entrepreneurs Service Co-operative Society, Prayas Marketing & Services Co-operative Society Ltd., Sikkim Damai Samaj, Daedal (P) Ltd., M/s Sikkim Food Processing Industries and M/s Deorali Varieties are said to be involved in the racket, the report said.
It is alleged that Commerce and Industries Department processed files and made payments without obtaining prior approval for the schemes.
M/s Vision Sikkim Industries Pvt. Ltd submitted proposal for imparting four months training in organic Food and Science and Technology for 15 ST candidates and 10 SC candidates at a total cost of Rs. 12.40 lakh. The same company also submitted another proposal on behalf of M/s Sikkim Motor Training and Engineering Institute for a four-month training of 15 ST candidates in production of fibre and earthen pots at a cost of Rs. 8.80 lakh.
It has been learnt that M/s Vision Sikkim Industries Pvt. Ltd and M/s Sikkim Motor Training and Engineering Institute did not have the requisite experience to undertake such trainings.
    The Scheduled Caste Entrepreneurs Service Co-operative Society had submitted proposal for four months training in accounting software for 20 SC candidates at a cost of Rs. 7, 60,200 but spent only about Rs. 1.60 against the sanctioned amount.
Again, Prayas Marketing & Services Co-operative Society Ltd submitted a proposal for imparting 3 months training for 20 ST candidates on commercial art & banner making at a cost of Rs. 4.35 lakh. In turn, the company outsourced their training programme to one Citi Computers under a 2-month package at the rate of Rs. 1, 600 per candidate.
Supreme Court raps govt on black money probe
Observer News Service
New Delhi, July 8: A retired judge of the Supreme Court and former chief justice of Bombay high court, Justice MB Shah (73), will be the vice-chairman of the Special Investigations Team (SIT) constituted to monitor the probe into black money stashed abroad. The SIT will be chaired by former Supreme Court judge, Justice BP Jeevan Reddy.
A direction to this effect was issued by the Apex court on Monday.
A bench comprising Justices B Sudershan Reddy and S S Nijjar, which is seized of the issue raised in a PIL by noted jurist Ram Jethmalani and others, pronounced the order saying monies generated and secreted away reveal the degree of "softness of the State".
The bench directed that the High-Level Committee (HLC) constituted by the government to look into the issue of black money would be a part of the SIT.
The SIT will monitor the investigation and the steps being taken to bring black money stashed away in foreign banks.
Pulling up the government for the 'laggardly pace' in investigations into the issue of black money stashed abroad, the Supreme Court
The court criticised the government over the handling of black money cases saying that despite issues of large sums of unaccounted monies, allegedly held by certain named individuals, and loose associations of them, "the investigations into the matter proceeded at a laggardly pace".
The Supreme Court rapped the government over the manner in which it failed to take follow up action in the case against Pune stud farm owner Hasan Ali Khan and Kolkata businessman Kashinath Tapurias, accused of stashing away black money abroad.
“During the continuing interrogation of Khan and the Tapurias, undertaken for the first time at the behest of this Court, many names of important persons, including leaders of some corporate giants, politically powerful people, and international arms dealers have cropped up. So far, no significant attempt has been made to investigate and verify the same,” the court observed.
“This is a further cause for the grave concerns of this court, and points to the need for continued, effective and day to day monitoring by a SIT constituted by this Court, and acting on behalf, behest and direction of this court,” the court said.
The court also expressed its serious concern over the name of Khan being linked to an international arms dealer saying “there was still no evidence of a really serious investigation into these other matters from the national security perspective.”
“The fact remains that the Union of India has struggled in conducting a proper investigation into the affairs of Khan and the Tapurias. While some individuals, whose names have come to the adverse knowledge of the Union of India, through the more recent investigations, have been interrogated, many more are yet to be investigated,” the court said.(see edit on page 2)
Observer  News Service
New Delhi, July 8: The Supreme Court on Tuesday reprimanded Sikkim High Court Chief Justice P D Dinakaran for filing motivated petition to delay the impeachment proceedings pending against him on corruption charges.
In a major setback for Dinakaran, the Supreme Court ruled that the impeachment proceedings against him would continue.
A bench comprising Justices G S Singhvi, C K Prasad and Karnataka High Court Chief Justice J S Khehar also vacated the stay against the inquiry against him on the charges of land grabbing, corruption and judicial misconduct.
The apex court also directed the removal of senior counsel P P Rao from the three member panel headed by sitting Supreme Court Judge Aftab Alam.
The bench of termed as "motivated" Dinakaran's plea for quashing the charges framed against him by the panel.
The three-member committee was initially expected to submit its report by June 24 this year, but now the inquiry report is going to be delayed.
Justice Dinakaran, whose elevation to the Supreme Court was put on hold following the media exposure of charges of corruption against him, is due to retire in May next year.
Rajya Sabha chairman Hamid Ansari had in January 2010 constituted a three-member panel comprising Supreme Court judge justice Aftab Alam, Karnataka high court chief justice JS Khehar and senior advocate PP Rao to examine the 12 charges framed in the notice of motion adopted by the House.
Dinakaran had challenged the proceedings on the ground that the panel had framed additional charges and was also independently conducting investigations and collecting material against him which, according to the judge, was not permissible under law. He has also sought recusal of senior counsel PP Rao.
The charges against the judge include land grabbing, accumulation of unaccounted assets, passing judicial order for extraneous considerations, following which his elevation to the Supreme Court was also stalled.
The apex court had on April 29 stayed the probe by the Rajya Sabha-appointed panel after Dinakaran expressed apprehension of a biased inquiry due to Rao's presence in the panel and that the committee had exceeded its jurisdiction.

SIKKIM OBSERVER JUNE 25, 2011
High Court acquits former minister P L Gurung in corruption case
By A Staff Reporter
Gangtok, June 24: The Sikkim High Court on Tuesday acquitted former minister PL Gurung of all corruption charged leveled against him by the State Government.
The single bench headed by Justice SP Wangdi in his order said the trial court “has not at all taken into consideration and completely overlooked the evidence of the witnesses” and has “summarily rejected” the claims “on pure presumptions and conjectures of prevailing market rate in the area without there being any cogent and tangible evidence.”
In October 2008, Gurung was sentenced by a local court to one year's imprisonment in a corruption case registered against him 16 years ago.
District and Sessions Judge S W Lepcha passed the order sentencing the former minister and also fined him Rs 5,000, in default of three month's additional imprisonment. The judge had convicted him for having assets disproportionate to his known sources of income amounting to Rs 33 lakh while he was a minister in the Nar Bahadur Bhandari government (1984 and 1994).
Murder accused Nicole Tamang in Nepal, CBI tells HC
Observer News Service
Kolkata, June 24: The CBI on Thursday informed the Calcutta High Court that Nicole Tamang, prime accused in the murder of All India Gorkha League chief Madan Tamang, has fled to Nepal after escaping from CID custody and steps were being taken for a red-corner notice against him.
 CBI counsel Himangshu Dey submitted a report before a division bench comprising Chief Justice JN Patel and Justice Asim Kumar Roy stating that it had credible information that Tamang had fled to Nepal.
He said that at 7 a.m. on March 11, Tamang was seen crossing the Indo-Nepal border.
Interception of the mobile phones of Tamang's relatives also indicated that he was in Nepal, Dey submitted.
According to the report, Nickole had entered Nepal on March 15 this year with two of his aides. After his escape, the Morcha leader had stayed in several places in south India, including Kochi and Coimbatore.
In its report submitted to the court, the CBI said Nickole was in Nepal’s Pashupatinagar, just across the border from Darjeeling.
The CBI counsel said that steps were being taken to issue a red corner notice against him and Interpol has already been informed.
The court asked Dey to produce Nickole in court within four weeks. The matter would be taken up for hearing again on July 21, when the CBI would have to file another progress report.
Madan Tamang was murdered in broad daylight on May 21 2010 at Chowrasta in Darjeeling town where he was to address a public meeting.
Nicole, a Gorkha Janmukti Morcha central committee member, absconded after the murder and was arrested by the CID on August 15 from a hideout at Bijonbari in Darjeeling.
He disappeared from CID custody in Pintail village near Siliguri on August 21.
While the CID had claimed that Nicole had fled from its custody, his wife Pema Tamang filed a petition in the High Court alleging foul play by the state investigating agency and prayed for a CBI probe.
Pema had filed a habeous corpus petition in the HC asking the police to produce her husband before the court.
Editorial
CRUSADE AGAINST CORRUPTION
Congress Stands Exposed
Anna Hazare and Baba Ramdev are not the issue in the fight against corruption in India. Their character and credibility may not be up to the expectations of some people, particularly politicians of the ruling elite in India. Criticism and condemnation of their  style of functioning and mode of operation in leading a nationwide crusade against corruption may also not  be justifiable to some extent. Some people may also doubt their motive for their anti-corruption campaign due to their alleged links with political parties and the Sangh Parivar. But the fact is that India needs a real shake up in dealing with rampant corruption. Even our judges, generals and journalists are hand-in-glove with the establishment in looting public money. And they are all doing it out in the open. The politicians are not taking the lead on his vital issue even though we have perhaps the most clean and honest Prime Minister since independence. And when civil society, fed up of the growing nexus between politicians, bureaucrats and businessmen, has an opportunity to protest against rampant corruption in public life it is the ruling Congress leaders who have become obstacles in the path of transparency, accountability and good governance, which they so often profess to champion.
It is not just the Commonwealth Games corruption scandal and the 2G scam that have shaken the foundations of Indian democracy; the reluctance and opposition to the clean-up process initiated by men such as Anna Hazare and Baba  Ramdev by India’s ruling elite has dampened the nation’s march towards ‘Shining India’. The UPA government and the Congress party’s reaction that the campaign against corruption is politically-motivated has not convinced those who are fed up with the way things are. Their accusation that “unelected tyrants” have threatened “parliamentary democracy” are just lame excuses to stay in power and continue looting the people. The real threat to parliamentary democracy and secularism in India comes from those who feel that once elected it is their birthright to trample over the rights and dignity of the common man. The Supreme Court this week has rightly stated in the 2G scam case involving DMK MP Kanimozhi that “corruption” is “the worst form of human rights violation.”
The irony is when Ramdev has demanded that black money amounting to rupees four lakh crore stashed away by the corrupt in Swiss banks be brought back to India it is Congress leaders and UPA stalwarts who want to investigate into Ramdev’s alleged Rs 1100 crore ‘empire.’ Go ahead and probe Ramdev’s ‘illegal assets’. Send him to jail if necessary but for goodness sake don’t make a fool of yourself by making lame excuses. Fact is that Baba Ramdev has given a call to all, including political parties, to join the crusade against corruption. The BJP and others parties have joined the anti-corruption campaign. Why is the Congress party behaving in a peculiar manner?
BJP takes Sikkim hydel projects scam to PAC
‘Dubious companies’ forced to disclose details
Observer News Service
Gangtok, June 24: The Sikkim Power Development Corporation Ltd (SPDCL) has reportedly asked all the 27 private hydro power project developers in the State to furnish all relevant details about their companies.
This move follows directions from Ministry of Power and Public Account Committee (PAC) Chairman Murli Manohar Joshi to the Corporation.
BJP National Secretary Kirit Somaiya had earlier sent a report to the PAC alleging serious lapses by the State Government in the development of hydroelectric power projects in the State.
The allegations range from projects being allotted to dubious companies and shady deals. The BJP wants CBI probe into the State’s power projects to uncover corrupt practices running into thousands of crore of rupees.
The companies will now be forced to disclose details such as company profiles, memorandum of association, balance sheet and details of shareholders.
Earlier, the Sikkim BJP President, Padam Bahadur Chettri, alleged that the SDF government has not disclosed details of the “up-front” money received from the many power project developers. He alleged that this amount which should go to the state exchequer has been deposited into ‘personal accounts’ in foreign banks.
After holding a day-long anti-corruption dharna here last month the State unit of the BJP is currently on a 6-month-long padyatra in the State to expose the Chamling Government’s alleged misrule and rampant corruption in the administration.
During the party’s poll campaign in Assam, BJP President Nitin Gadkari said corruption to the tune of Rs 63,000 crore had hit Northeast states, including Sikkim, in development projects, including hydel projects.
Somaiya, who is part of the three-member team constituted by the party to probe into the charges, said, “All the seven states of the Northeast and Sikkim have been witnessing systematic looting of the state exchequer by politicians in power and officials.”
“The BJP will not remain a mute spectator to this loot raj and if required, we will approach the apex court to bring the culprits to book,” he added.
Referring to the State Government’s dealing with hydel projects in the State, the annual CAG report released here recently said the State Government awarded project works to private parties at “throwaway charges”, leading to neglect of “environmental issues”, loss of huge revenue and lack of development in the local area concerned.
“The State Government commenced award of hydro power projects to Independent Power Producers (IPP) without working out any effective modality and finalizing any plan or policy,” the CAG report said.
OBITUARY Tenzing Dahdul
A True Son of Sikkim
Jigme N. Kazi

The ’70s was a historic period in Sikkim’s long and checkered political history. The political turmoil in the former kingdom, which began in early 1973, led to the signing of the historic Tripartite Agreement on May 8, 1973 between the Chogyal of Sikkim, Government of India and leaders of three major political parties in Sikkim.
Led by former Chief Minister Kazi Lhendup Dorji Khangsarpa of Sikkim Congress, the Indian-backed April 1973 agitation culminated in abolition of the monarchy, leading to Sikkim’s merger with its protecting power, India, in April 1975.
Inspired by the 12th Chogyal of Sikkim , Palden Thondup Namgyal, nationalist forces in Sikkim led by Nar Bahadur Bhandari not only opposed the ‘merger’ but fought against the Kazi Government’s devious tactics to deceive the people in what later came to be known as “the selling of Sikkim.”
But despite New Delhi’s tacit backing of anti-Sikkim and pro-India elements in the former kingdom led by Kazi and Co., the Bhandari-led Sikkim Parishad struggled to expose the many misdeeds of the fake democrats who led a phony revolution that promised freedom and democracy to the Sikkimese people. As time passed by the Sikkimese people came to the bitter realization of how their beloved country was mischievously and deviously gifted away by those who promised janta raj and greater political rights to the majority Nepali community.
The period 1973-79 was a sad and painful era in Sikkim’s recent political history. While the Chogyal was under house arrest, Sikkimese nationalists, who opposed the merger and wanted Sikkim to retain its distinct international entity while being close to India, were victimized, harassed and hounded. Many of them had to flee their homes to spend weeks in their jungle hideouts while leaders such as Bhandari, AK Subba and ‘Capt’ Sonam Yongda were jailed for their pro-Sikkim stand.
One such leader who stood firm and resolute in this hour of crisis was Tenzing Dahdul, who is often referred to as ‘Tholung Agya Maila’. The second son of Tholung Pipon (Pipon is the village headman), who was a prominent leader of the minority Bhutia-Lepcha tribals, Agya Maila breathed his last on June 15 last week on Saga Dawa, the thrice-blessed day for Buddhists.
He leaves behind his wife, three sons and a daughter.
While his father died in 1980 his mother passed away only very recently and among the survivors of the Tholung family are his three brothers and five sisters. Though the main Tholung families now reside in Mangan, headquarters of north district, they belong to Tholung, a remote area north of the Lepcha-inhabited region of Dzongu. Close to Kanchenjunga, the world’s third highest mountain, the abode of Sikkim’s Guardian Deity Khangchendzongpa, the Tholung family has traditionally been given the rare privilege of being the guardian and keeper of the Tholung Gompa (monastery), where rare and precious holy scriptures and articles belonging to Sikkim’s patron saints, including Lama Lhatsun Namkha Jigme and Jigme Pao, are kept.
Agya Maila was 73 when he passed away. He was unwell for a while due to heart ailments. To those around him he gave enough indications that his time was up.
   Elected to the Sikkim Legislative Assembly on Sikkim Parishad ticket in the historic 1979 Assembly polls from Lachen-Mangshilla constituency from the tribal-dominated north district, Tenzing Dahdul remained firm to his ideals and principles to the very last. He was a simple, straight-forward villager who was not only the pillar of Tholung family but a prominent leader of the Bhutia-Lepchas and  a true Sikkimese.
When the Assembly seat reservation of his community, the Bhutia-Lepchas, was under attack politically and legally in the ’70s and ’80s Tenzing Dahdul came out in the open and defended his community valiantly and successfully.  That the Bhutia-Lepchas continue to have 13 reserved seats, including the lone Sangha seat, in the 32-member Assembly is mainly due to the efforts and sacrifices of people like Tenzing Dahdul, who was not only a petitioner in the seat reservation case in the Supreme Court but actively defended his case in the people’s court and sought to champion Sikkim’s special status within the Union.
And yet this was the same person who refused to accept chairmanship in the Bhandari Government mainly because he felt that due to his lack of formal education he would not be able to do justice to the post. He was perhaps the only Parishad MLA who did not accept any official post in the Bhandari Government (1979-1984).
And yet it was largely due to his help that another of his Parishad colleague, Athup Lepcha of Dzongu (North Sikkim), was able to defeat Kazi from Dzongu Constituency in the 1979 Assembly polls. This historic victory against the man who ‘sold Sikkim’ not only vindicated the Sikkimese people’s struggle to preserve their own distinct political identity but also gave peace and hope to the people who longed for truth and justice to triumph.
After Parishad merged with the Congress party in July 1981 Dahdul remained a loyal and faithful Congressman till the very end. He once told me, “We cannot and must not go against the Congress party because it is Gyagar Jheung (Government of India).”
Today, a portrait of Rajiv Gandhi still hangs in his drawing room at Tholung House in Mangan, a constant reminder where his loyalty lay.  Though he was not an active Congressman or politician when he passed away Agya Maila was a prominent social worker and a face in the crowd in Sikkim, particularly in North Sikkim.
A few months after his death in 1982 the Sikkim Assembly paid rich tributes to “the last representative” of the Namgyal Dynasty: “During the hour of his trial, when his very throne was at stake, Chogyal Palden Thondup Namgyal stood like a rock and sacrificed petty considerations for the lofty ideal he had espoused…. And his descendents will be able to walk with their heads held high whatever their circumstances in life happen to be.”
In his own way Tenzing Dahdul, too, stood like a rock and sacrificed petty considerations for the lofty ideal he had espoused. His family members, friends, well-wishers and descendents will, therefore, be able to walk with their heads held high whatever their circumstances in life happen to be.
Tenzing Dahdul is now no more but his deeds and dreams will live on in the hearts and minds of generations of Sikkimese yet to be born.