The agitators set aflame a Railway Protection Force (RPF) office in Kurseong and a police outpost in Sukhiapokhri in the wee hours today, the police said.
A state-run library in Mirik sub-division too was set ablaze last night by Gorkhaland supporters. The library was reduced to ashes, they said.
The hills witnessed violence despite continued deployment of three columns of the Army in Darjeeling, Kalimpong and Sonada.
With food supply severely hit due to the indefinite strike, which entered the 30th day today, the GJM and various NGOs of the hills distributed food items among people.
Also Read
Barring medicine outlets, all shops, schools, colleges have remained closed with internet services too straying suspended for the 27th day today.
The picturesque hill station had earlier witnessed a 40-day bandh in 1988 and a 44-day shutdown in 2013.
The government told a three-judge bench headed by Justice Dipak Misra that 11 CRPF companies are already deployed in Darjeeling and Kalimpong and they have decided to send four more companies to ensure the safety of citizens and to maintain law and order there.
Attorney General K K Venugopal told the bench, which also had A M Khanwilkar and M M Shantanagoudar on it, that the Calcutta High Court today asked the government to deploy four additional companies of CRPF there and they are rushing additional paramilitary forces there.
The court also asked the state government to provide additional forces from its own resources to bring back normalcy in the hills.
The Gorkhaland Movement Coordination Committee (GMCC) has decided to postpone its fast-unto-death programme from July 15 due to upcoming presidential elections.
"We have decided to postpone the programme of fast-unto- death as presidential elections are nearby. We will take a call on it at our next all-party meeting on July 18," a member of GMCC told PTI.
Disclaimer: No Business Standard Journalist was involved in creation of this content