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The Gorkha Janmukti Morcha (GJM, on 21 June, has offered a "12-hour window" to schools in the Darjeeling hills to evacuate their students safely to Siliguri and Rongpo.
Senior GJM leader Binay Tamang told reporters:
He said barring school buses, no other vehicle would be allowed to leave the hills during the 12-hour window. Darjeeling is home to some of the oldest and renowned boarding schools in the country
All shops remained shut and internet services remained shut on 21 June, the seventh day of the GJM-sponsored indefinite shutdown in Darjeeling.
An all-party meeting convened by the Gorkha Janmukti Morcha (GJM), on 20 June, passed a resolution that the shutdown would continue until security forces were withdrawn.
A delegation of GJM also met Union minister Kiren Rijiju who was in Gangtok for World Yoga day and submitted a two-point memorandum demanding a separate state of Gorkhaland.
The GJM took out small rallies in various parts of the hills demanding a separate state.
Locals termed the suspension of internet services an "oppressive step against a democratic movement".
The parties also decided not to participate in the 22 June all-party meet called by the West Bengal government to discuss the prevailing situation in the hills.
GJM spokesperson T Arjun had told reporters after the meeting that it was also decided that an all-party coordination committee would be formed which would soon send a delegation to meet Prime Minister Narendra Modi and Union Home Minister Rajnath Singh to press for the demand for Gorkhaland.
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