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The GJM signed the deal with the Indian government and the government of West Bengal state.
Some other local ethnic groups, however, have opposed the deal.
The hardline groups - including Amra Bangali, Jana Jagaran and Jana Chetana - say they will settle for nothing less than a separate state carved out of West Bengal.
Monday's deal paves the way for the setting up of a Gorkhaland Territorial Administration (GTA), an elected body for the Darjeeling hills.
Elections for the 50-member body, which will have powers to set up industries and create government jobs, will be held this year.
GJM leaders said the GTA was not a "compromise on its demand for a separate state and was, in fact, a step in that direction".
The groups opposed to the deal held a 24-hour strike in the plains near the Darjeeling hill region to protest the deal.
The Gorkha campaign for a separate state started in the early 1980s.
But a settlement that gave them considerable autonomy brought the movement to an end in 1988.
However, three years ago, the movement was resumed by Gorkha hardliners who believe the autonomy arrangement has not worked.
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