New Delhi. Friday, 22 May 2026
A viral document circulating rapidly across social media platforms claiming that the Government of India is planning an administrative overhaul to merge the Darjeeling Hills, Kalimpong, Terai, and Dooars regions into the neighboring state of Sikkim has been officially debunked as an outright hoax.
The letter, falsely dated May 10, 2026, purports to be an official preliminary review issued by the Ministry of Home Affairs (MHA) and features a forged signature of Union Home Minister Amit Shah. However, independent verifications and official data confirm that no such proposal, consultative meeting, or restructuring plan exists.
The Core Claims vs. The Truth
The fabricated document outlines an elaborate, fictitious timeline discussing regional boundary restructuring following census and delimitation procedures. It claims that high-level consultative meetings were scheduled between the state governments of West Bengal and Sikkim.
In reality, the Central Government has issued no such notifications. Experts and administrative authorities have noted several massive discrepancies that immediately flag the document as a forgery:
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Absence of Government Tracking: The document lacks the standard digital alphanumeric tracking codes, official letterhead verification numbers, and legal citations typical of genuine MHA press releases or notifications.
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Zero Official Records: No such letter or notice has been published on the Press Information Bureau (PIB) platform or the official database of the Ministry of Home Affairs.
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Procedural Discrepancies: The bureaucratic phraseology, document layout, and signature positioning do not comply with official central secretariat protocols.
Why a Darjeeling-Sikkim Merger is Constitutionally Impossible
This is not the first time political rumors of this nature have surfaced in the region. Political analysts and legal experts emphasize that merging parts of West Bengal with Sikkim is not a simple administrative decision.
Sikkim’s special status and territorial integrity are heavily protected under Article 371F of the Constitution of India. This article preserves Sikkim’s distinct historical identity and laws that existed prior to its merger with the Indian Union in 1975. Any alteration to boundaries would trigger immense legal hurdles, making a casual or quiet administrative merger impossible.
Furthermore, political leadership from both West Bengal and Sikkim have previously condemned such rumors, calling them malicious attempts by bad actors to spark unnecessary public tension and unrest in sensitive border regions.
Public Safety Notice: Spreading unverified or fabricated government documents can lead to legal action under IT and public order acts. Citizens are urged to completely halt the forwarding of this social media message and always check official government portals for authentic updates.
For more regional coverages and ground-level reporting on this situation, you can read our ongoing political updates directly on the Matribhumi Samachar English Portal.
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