Calcutta High Court stays withdrawal of Central forces from Hills

The vacation bench on Tuesday directed the Centre to file an affidavit in response to the state government's plea by October 23.

Update: 2017-10-17 19:48 GMT
Calcutta High Court

Kolkata: The Calcutta high court on Tuesday stayed the withdrawal of Central Armed Paramilitary Forces (CAPF) from Darjeeling hills, the scene of unrest over the statehood demand, till October 27, in a relief to the West Bengal government.

 Hearing a plea by the state against the Centre’s decision to withdraw CAPF from Darjeeling and Kalimpong districts, a division bench of Justices Harish Tandon and Debangshu Basak ordered an interim stay.

It asked the state government to move a regular bench of the high court when it reopens on October 23 after the Diwali holidays.

Appearing for the state, advocate-general Kishore Dutta prayed for status quo on the deployment of the forces. Altogether 15 companies of CAPF are deployed in the area. He said the matter would be mentioned before the Chief Justice on the first PIL day after the court reopens.

The PILs are generally heard on a Friday. He referred to the killing of a police officer a few days ago when Bimal Gurung-led Gorkha Janmukti Morcha supporters fired at the security forces hunting for him, to buttress the state government’s claim about the need for continued deployment of CAPF.

The high court had while hearing a PIL on July 14 directed the Centre to deploy four more companies of CAPF in addition to the 11 already present in the Hills then.

The advocate general submitted that as the deployment was made following an order of the high court which had also been endorsed by the Supreme Court the same day on another petition before it, the Centre cannot withdraw the forces unilaterally without the permission of the court.

The vacation bench on Tuesday directed the Centre to file an affidavit in response to the state government’s plea by October 23.    

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