Tourists flee as
Darjeeling troubles boil over
KOLKATA, June 12, (AFP) - Thousands of tourists fled the Indian hill resort of Darjeeling on Monday after separatists warned that a general strike could degenerate into violence.
KOLKATA, June 12, (AFP) - Thousands of tourists fled the Indian hill resort of Darjeeling on Monday after separatists warned that a general strike could degenerate into violence.
Hundreds of troops and riot police
patrolled the streets of the famed tea-producing resort in eastern India as
panicked tourists packed their bags.
Riots and arson attacks in Darjeeling
last week left 12 people injured and the Gorkha Janmukti Morcha (GJM) group
warned at the weekend that "untoward" events could happen when the
general strike started Monday.
The hills are famous for the
Darjeeling tea whose production is jealously guarded. It is also famed for its
"toy train" -- a 78-kilometer uphill ride from New Jalpaiguri.
But the troubles have dealt a major
blow to the region's crucial tourism industry. Pradip Lama, secretary of the
Darjeeling Tourist Association of Travel Agents, told AFP that worried visitors
are leaving and nearly 70 percent of bookings have been cancelled.
"Till Sunday, 7,000 tourists left
Darjeeling," Lama said.The GJM want to set up their own state named
Gorkhaland in the hill region which is now part of West Bengal.Tensions have
risen again in Darjeeling over a government decision to introduce the Bengali
language in schools. Indigenous Gorkhas, who mainly speak Nepali, are furious.
"We had heard about the trouble
and still reached the hill resort on Friday, hoping that the situation would be
normal," Priya Roy, a tourist from the southern city of Bangalore, told
AFP."We have decided to leave Darjeeling after GJM's warning to
tourists."
Another tourist said their group's
vehicle was mobbed by slogan-shouting protesters who demanded to know their
identities."I clutched at my mother's arm even as she begged with folded
hands, pleading with them to let us go," Kamalika Chatterjee told
AFP.Bimal Gurung, head of the GJM, told AFP his "warning to the tourists
was for their own safety" as the events could worsen anytime if his group
launches a full-scale campaign for a separate state.
The Gorkhas have been campaigning for
decades for a homeland. They say Bengali-speaking outsiders have exploited
their resources and imposed their culture and language. A similar agitation in
2007 led to the granting of some administrative powers to local people.
Many groups in India have waged
similar campaigns to break away from larger states, mostly on linguistic and
ethnic grounds or in hopes of economic benefits. The last successful agitation
led to the formation of Telangana state in 2014.
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