Three tea gardens reopen in Darjeeling

Normalcy has eluded the hills for the past three months due to an indefinite strike by the Gorkha Janmukti Morcha over the Gorkhaland statehood issue

September 18, 2017 07:36 pm | Updated 07:36 pm IST - Darjeeling

A file photo of workers at a tea garden in Darjeeling.

A file photo of workers at a tea garden in Darjeeling.

Three tea gardens in the Darjeeling hills reopened on Monday, signalling a gradual return to normalcy that has eluded the hills for the past three months due to an indefinite strike by the Gorkha Janmukti Morcha over the Gorkhaland statehood issue.

“Today three tea gardens reopened. We are hopeful that more tea gardens will reopen in the days to come,” a senior police official said.

The development came two days after expelled GJM leader Binay Tamang held a meeting with several tea garden officials and owners and assured them that no untoward incident will take place if the gardens reopened.

A large number of shops also opened during the day, the 96th day of the strike in Darjeeling. The situation remained tense but incident-free despite threats and intimidation by GJM.

For the tenth day in a row, police along with the administration appealed to the locals over public address systems to open shops and restore normalcy in the hills.

Peace rallies were taken out by residents in Kurseong, Darjeeling and Mirik, while GJM supporters took out rallies in support of a separate Gorkhaland and the ongoing shutdown in sections of Darjeeling, Sonada and Kalimpong.

Chief Minister Mamata Banerjee had urged the Gorkhaland protesters in Darjeeling to withdraw their strike and restore normalcy.

Internet services remain suspended in the hills since June 18.

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