Tuesday, October 8, 2013

A Gorkhaland State: How Justified?
*Saumitra Mohan

           At a time when the Indian economy is in a tailspin with the rupee maintaining a sustained southward penchant to Newtonian forces, it is really quite disturbing and disconcerting to see some dormant statehood movements rearing their heads in the wake of the recent decision to form a new Telangana state through division of the extant state of Andhra Pradesh. Such demands inter alia include demands for a separate state of Gorkhaland (comprising Darjeeling and adjoining areas of Terai and Dooars), Kamtapur (comprising areas of Assam and North Bengal) and Greater Cochbehar (comprising most of North Bengal) in West Bengal, Bodoland  and Karbi-Anglong in Assam,  Harit Pradesh, Bundelkhand and Purvanchal in Uttar Pradesh, Mithilanchal in Bihar, Vidarbha in Maharashtra and Saurashtra in Gujarat.
             It is really quite painful to know that even after 67 years of our hard-earned independence, we are yet to complete our State-building process, not to speak of the nation-building process. One feels that all these statehood  movements of different genres are nothing but morbid expressions of these incomplete processes. Having seen, at least, one such movement at close quarters and having followed many others quite closely, one can definitely say that most of these statehood movements are more of a reflection of the selfish and egotistic desires, steeped in self aggrandisement, of the local elites of different hues than being embedded in the genuine aspirations of the local inhabitants. Most of the times, such movements are inspired by the politics and politicking of one or the other kind rather than being rooted in the real desire for a holistic development and good governance of the area concerned.
            In West Bengal, the demand for a separate state of Gorkhaland is claimed to be as old as 107 years. The proponents of this movement advance many reasons in support of their demands. They  argue that Darjeeling geographically was never a part of West Bengal, that Darjeeling has been hugely exploited and underdeveloped by West Bengal and that Gorkhas being a different ethnic community, they  deserve a separate state of their own.  Then, the Gorkhaland supporters also demand the 398 contiguous and non-contiguous mouzas (read villages) of adjoining Terai and Dooars areas of Siliguri and Jalpaiguri to be added to the proposed Gorkhaland state, mostly against the will and desire of the people therein. The argument proffered for such inclusion is the inhabitance of a substantive Nepali speaking population in these areas though there is already a counter movement by majority of the population in these areas against any such thinking or attempted move.
            Now, if we dissect and discuss all these reasons along with some other more important associated factors of statecraft dispassionately, the demand for a separate Gorkhaland state definitely does  not appear more than emotional outpourings of the people of Darjeeling. If we really consider the historicity of Darjeeling as a ground for formation of a separate state of Gorkhaland, then all the hard work done by our founding fathers led by the redoubtable Sardar Vallabhbhai Patel of unifying those 565 motley princely states into a united Indian federal state might come apart. The real idea behind consolidating all these small princely provinces into a larger unit to be part of a larger federal entity called India was to put together a unified and a more cohesive country. However, once we allow this logic of historicity, India should actually be having hundreds of states today with West Bengal itself being broken into many. Such regressive revisionism would be a very negative development and might unravel our composite co-existence as a modern nation-state.
        Now, let's consider some other issues involved here. The hill areas of Darjeeling (Gorkhaland movement is primarily confined to the three hill sub-divisions of Darjeeling district of  West Bengal district namely Darjeeling Sadar, Kurseong and Kalimpong)   has a population of around 9.75 lakhs of which around seven lakhs people can roughly fall into the category of Gorkhas, the remaining being Lepchas, Bhutias, Marwaris, Biharis, Tibetans and other non-Gorkha communities. So, the proponents of this movement are actually seeking a separate state for these seven lakh people, the others perforce being part of the movement with no choice being available to them. In fact, the Lepchas have already been expressly complaining of being shortchanged by  the Gorkhaland champions. The term 'Gorkhaland' itself is not a hold-all concept and ergo, does not do justice to the identities of the various other ethnic communities as residing in Darjeeling. 
            So, if a recognition were to be given to a statehood demand for a people of seven to nine lakh population, then how many constituent states or provinces should we be having in this country of over 125 crore people. If our mighty Gorkhas were to be given a separate state, then how many states are we actually bargaining for in a country where we have over 5000 ethnic communities and castes with around 850 languages. If this demand is recognized, then what justification shall we have to deny a state for the Yadavas, the Jats, the Rajputs, the  Santhals, the Meenas and what not, with most of them having a sizable population, in fact, many of them being much more numerous than the Gorkhas.
           Again, the demand for ceding the contiguous mouzas or areas with sizable Gorkha population attacks the very concept of pluralism which is the hallmark of our  salad-bowl or Ganga-Jamuni co-existential culture. The Gorkhaland proponents desire that all the nearby areas with substantial Nepali speaking population also be given to the proposed Gorkhaland state. Even if we ignore this most important factor of our societal pluralism being compromised as a result of such a parochial  demand for a while, still such a demand is very  difficult  to be accepted for some practical considerations.
            First, this is plainly wrong to assume that all the Nepali speaking people are ipso facto Gorkhas or want Gorkhaland.  Secondly, most of the demanded areas have a predominant majority of the people other than the Nepali speaking population. Thirdly, even some of the areas where the Nepali  speaking people are in majority are mostly enclaves within another district or other community dominated areas. Annexing these areas to the extant Gorkhaland Territorial Administration (GTA) or later to the demanded Gorkhaland state  is  administratively not a feasible proposition as also observed by the Justice Shyamal Sen Commission which was constituted to explore the feasibility of such inclusions. Also, the Nepali speaking population in most of  these mouzas is estimated to be not more than 20-30 per cent meaning thereby that by ceding such areas to the new entity, a great disservice shall be done to the desire of the other communities who are in majority in those mouzas. In fact, there is already a strong counter movement against this desired merger with the proposed Gorkhaland state.
            Besides, once we recognize such a demand, a Pandora's Box shall be opened. It not only jeopardizes the plural character of our society by artificially trying to make it monochromatic, but also opens the flood-gates for similar such demands from vested interests in different  parts of the country. After all, every state has some population of one or the other ethno-linguistic groups which can suitably be demanded by other states. By this logic, all the Bengali speaking areas of Assam should come to West Bengal or the Hindi speaking or tribal dominated areas of latter should go to Bihar  or Jharkhand respectively. By the same logic, the entire Hindi heartland of North India should become a huge monolithic state. The resultant outcome of acceding to such a demand may indeed be very chaotic. It is a very archaic and regressive thinking which ought not to be given any further encouragement.
            Again, the alleged historical exploitation of Darjeeling by the state of West Bengal does not hold because Darjeeling has the best of social development indicators in the country and is definitely among the best in West Bengal. As per the West Bengal Human Development Report, 2004 prepared under the supervision of the United Nations Development Programme (UNDP), Darjeeling was ranked 2nd and 4th in terms of the gender and human development indices respectively,  among all the districts of West Bengal.
If underdevelopment and exploitation of Darjeeling can be cited as a justification for statehood, then Darjeeling ought to fall much behind in the queue for promotion to statehood as there are many more regions in the country which would have the first claim to statehood.  Be it the income, literacy rates, educational attainments, nutritional status, percentage of BPL (below poverty line) population, longevity, infant and maternal mortality, overall health status of people and infrastructures, Darjeeling fares much better compared to most parts of the country or the different districts of the state of West Bengal. Be it noted that Darjeeling has for the past more than two and a half decades been under such autonomous local self-government bodies as Darjeeling Gorkha Hill Council (DGHC) and GTA.
            But still, if the statehood proponents believe that Darjeeling needs more development, then statehood is definitely no solution. We are all well conversant with the experiences of some of the already existing states whose development record is just pathetic, to say the least. Jharkhand became a state against the same background of alleged underdevelopment, but even after a lapse of more than a decade's time, it is still much far off from realization of the developmental goals it set out to achieve way back in the year 2000. Jharkhand today fares very badly among the newly created states and has only become worse since its creation. The fact remains that the proponents of any such statehood movements including those of Gorkhaland should  actually be talking of good governance and good administration than anything else. A statehood trapping sans the desideratum of good governance will achieve nothing but zilch.
            Then, given its size, both demographically and geographically, Darjeeling already receives a disproportionate per capita share of resources compared to many other parts of the country. And a substantial share of these resources come from the state of West Bengal meaning thereby that West Bengal has traditionally been providing disproportionate resources to Darjeeling, often at the expense of the more backward and deserving areas of the state. The extant Gorkhaland Territorial Administration's revenue from all sources is assumed to be not more than three crores annually. If we also include the revenue received by the state government from such sources as land, excise, transport, professional and sales tax, then at most the figure is likely to go up to  around 30 crore rupees. At the most and at its best, tapping all the obtaining and potential sources of revenue, it can barely go up to 100 crore rupees annually in the most ideal of situations. In the shorter run, however, a 50 crore rupee annual revenue appears a more practical figure.
           Moreover, GTA reportedly has a non-plan expenditure of around 600 crores at the moment which with plan and schematic expenses would come to around 1400 crores. If at all Darjeeling comprising the three hill sub-divisions becomes the cherished Gorkhaland state, the combined plan and non-plan expenditure is likely to shoot up to, at least, 2000 crores factoring the expenses for general and police administration, not to speak of various attendant expenses which comes with the formation of a new state. So, if a region which has the best of developmental indicators and which has the revenue generation potential of only around 50 crore rupees, why should they be getting a disproportionate 2000 crores at the expense of the more deserving parts of the countries, particularly those areas of Chhattisgarh, West Bengal, Orissa, Bihar, Jharkhand, Maharashtra, Andhra Pradesh and other states reeling under extremist menace.
            The Gorkhaland proponents should show that they are in a position to bear all the non-plan and, at least, a portion of the plan expenses of the proposed Gorkhaland state before demanding the same. If such a new entity expects to be spoon-fed through the Central government's doles, would not there be similar justified demands from different parts  of the country. And if we allow this for one particular region, can we deny the same to others. We ought to understand that an eponymous Gorkhaland state is not just about emotional wishes of our countrymen in Darjeeling, but has much far-reaching insidious implications for the rest of the country as the same would only spur more and more such demands as already seems to be happening in the wake of the announced creation of a new state of Telangana.
            The Gorkhaland proponents often compare their status with the neighbouring Sikkim or the smaller states of North East when they claim statehood or disproportionate share of the developmental pie. We are all aware of the historical reasons and circumstances which led to the statehood or special status of these north-eastern states. If Telangana has today  been proposed to be  a  state, it  is because of its geographical  compactness, a suitable demographic  size, administrative viability and  self-sufficient resources. But  the same does  not apply  to  many such  demands elsewhere  including Gorkhaland. If all of us keep demanding  statehood on such grounds, then our state-building process shall never come to an end, not to speak of the nation-building process. The Gorkhaland proponents should actually aim at making the GTA work successfully, which came into being through a tripartite agreement between the Central Government, the Government of West Bengal and the dominant hill party i.e. Gorkha Jan Mukti Morcha (GJMM) on 18th July, 2011. GTA is an autonomous and empowered body which has just completed one year of its existence and can be suitably harnessed to fulfill the developmental aspirations of the local people, if development is what they are looking for.
           One really feels that our policy makers should really do some serious thinking to consider all such statehood demands dispassionately once and for all through the instrumentality of a second States Reorganization Commission or any other such mechanism as might be practically possible. Any such decision by the said Commission should be predicated on some logical pre-determined criteria including geographical contiguity and compactness, administrative cohesiveness and financial viability. If we continue dithering on such issues and allow them to be decided by the narrow forces of politics and politicking, then we are certainly doomed as a modern nation-state with the entrenched vested interests slowly but surely eating into the vitals of our beloved country.
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*(The views expressed by the author in this article are completely personal and do not reflect those of the Government. )


2 comments:

Anonymous said...

Part 1
Dear Dr Mohan

The economic troubles is certainly a concern for all citizens of India but please do shed some light on how it is related your woes about the demand for separate states? Have you done some statistical study on this; we would definitely like to know its impact on India GDP. Or are you implying that in your personal opinion the second major issue facing India is the demand for separate states. An average Indian does not even hear about these demands and rather have strong feelings about corruption (including in the bureaucracy). Your intellectual insights are really needed to educate the Indians on this and please do educate the political parties also to include this in their election manifesto...how dare they forget!

Your arguments are so incisive...really.... and who better than you would know the real cause of these movements...egotistical and selfish desires....wow. So you do doubt the intellectual capacities of the people in these regions, one leader takes up the issue...abandons it... another leader takes it up and still people follow not understanding these egotistical desires. Till today I was under the impression that these desires are deep rooted in those people and there would always come a leader to exploit those desires....You really opened my mind....but wait how did "emotional outpouring" come into the picture come up here....no must be a typo..no ...no... it is not emotional...it is just egotistical and selfish desires.

So, ok we should not look at history...history is past..its more convenient that way....by the way was Darjeeling a princely state? I did not know that.... but history does not matter. And you say that the people...no so egotistical person is also demanding the contiguous areas like Siliguri? My God Siliguri is not even in the Darjeeling District. Some idiot told me Siliguri was in the Darjeeling district and it was populated by the Gorkhas before the mass illegal migration of Bangladeshi immigrants and even the adivasis were brought by the British here. I have got to really tell him the truth and ask him to watch what he speaks. Anyways history does not matter.

And you are so correct about the population mix of the area. There are so many Biharis and Marwaris....and others...The west bengal must do away with Nepali as the official communication language in the hills...Oh you are so well versed with the area that your know that the Biharis, Marwaris, Lepchas Tibetans don't communicate in Nepali in the area. And the more important argument is that states have been divided in linguistic lines so if Nepali is nto the lingua franca the whole demand does not hold any water...and the Lepcha Board has also been in existence for hundreds of days now! the Lepcha language was taught in government schools for how long now...please inform your readers about it as well...that would present a really tight argument.... I hope the Nepali language is not in the india's scheduled languages...that would even provide a stronger case for you when you talk about 850 languages.

Anonymous said...

Part II
And yes for encouraging pluralism, why dont we give part of west bengal to Bihar, have some parts of Bihar in West bengal, similarly with Orissa....please do it....It would even make the map of West Bengal look better..... I am always disturbed by its map...why does it start to taper towards the north and have only a chicken neck towards the northeast almost as if the north part does not belong to west bengal.....no no... we should definitely have more of Bihar in the northern side in West Bengal...We could even abandon Bengali then as the official language and only have Hindi as the official language... that would even be better for national integration. All these complication of language and adminstrations too...why dont we do the state reorganization again....good clean straight lines with equal areas for states if not an equitable distribution of land for states on resource lines....we want development and national integration....and let us also remove all these sub nationalism....why name a state as Bengal...lets have states name like A, B, C....

No...no how can these people say that Darjeeling is underdeveloped....The west bengal government has constructed the himalayas by which people earn their livelihood here, the sanitation and water facilities was built by the British under the orders from the West Bengal goverment, the tea garden workers are so rich that they go for holidays abroad three times a year while the owners in Kolkata have hardly anything to eat.....The west bengal government planted the huge forest reserves there while the west bengal forest development develops them by cutting down the trees and sending it down to the plains to be consumed. And what to say of the roads....it is like riding on Hema Malini's cheeks!And the gorkha community is know for its suppression of the women folk...if fact they are worst than the Taliban.....but so much work has been done by the west bengal government that it now ranks 2.....and all these renowned schools were made by the west bengal government due to which it also ranks so high on the development index. In fact so much civil servants of west bengal have been engaged in the effective implementation of the west bengal govt policies that other parts of west bengal have been neglected and that is why they are so poor on these fronts.

Yes the west bengal government has spent so much in Darjeeling that the North Bengal University, North Bengal Medical College and all such programs in the name of Darjeeling has been given to Siliguri and Siliguri is in Darjeeling...no no siliguri is not in Darjeeling..I am so confused please help me

Also there are more deserving areas in Westbengal that get less money form the west bengal govenment....please provide me with some references here as I can present my case even more strongly...my friend here begs to differ..... Yes the dispropotionate arguemtn is so true...Why is Sikkim also getting so much money...Dr please also do the same analysis for Sikkim... it would really help me with the some real stats here...but you are right.....you know everything.

and of course there is this irritating economics prof now a vice Chancellor who keeps of advocating the economic sustainability of Gorkhaland. Why dont you please shut him up once and for all.

Your arguments are so dispassionate that fact driven...please keep up the work