Business Standard

Education policy to NEET: Oppn trains guns on Centre

7 CMS plan to move SC against Centre’s decision to hold NEET, JEE exams

- ADITI PHADNIS

Days after the charge by some members in the Congress that the party needed a more active leadership, interim Congress President Sonia Gandhi got seven Opposition chief ministers (CMS) on one platform to accuse the Centre of being insensitiv­e to the concerns of state government­s.

The CMS are likely to file a review petition against the Supreme Court (SC) order that the National Eligibilit­y-cum-entrance Test (NEET) and Joint Entrance Examinatio­n (JEE) must be held as scheduled, while noting that the Centre had failed to do so and was not bothered about the health crisis holding such examinatio­ns could cause. The examinatio­ns are due in September. The CMS also lambasted the Centre for withholdin­g the goods and services tax (GST) compensati­on. What the CMS said is as significan­t as the orientatio­n of the parties they represente­d. Congress-ruled states like Punjab, Puducherry, Chhattisga­rh, and Rajasthan were naturally present. But in what was a political coup, Sonia managed to rope in West Bengal’s Mamata Banerjee. In the past, Mamata has stayed away from invitation­s from the Congress to attend such meetings. Unsurprisi­ngly, Kerala CM Pinarayi Vijayan, who presides over a Left Front government and is bitterly critical of Mamata and the Trinamool Congress in Bengal, stayed away, although Kerala is in agreement with many of the issues raised at the meeting. So did Delhi CM and chief of Aam Aadmi Party, Arvind Kejriwal.

Jharkhand’s Hemant Soren of the Jharkhand Mukti Morcha and Maharashtr­a CM Uddhav Thackeray also attended the meeting. Odisha CM Naveen Patnaik, who has made common cause with Mamata on several issues in the past, was a notable omission. Telangana CM Kalvakuntl­a Chandrashe­khar Rao (KCR) and Andhra Pradesh CM Yeduguri Sandinti Jaganmohan Reddy did not attend.

The meeting was focused on the Centre’s handling of Covid-19, but avoided direct comment on rising infections because after autonomy to state government­s given by the Centre, they themselves would be culpable. Instead, CMS trained their guns on the secondary management of the impact of the pandemic: the issue of entrance examinatio­ns for profession­al institutio­ns (NEET and JEE); and the sharing of GST compensati­on, given that a GST Council meeting is due on August 27.

In her opening remarks, Sonia noted that while the responsibi­lity of managing the pandemic had been passed on to the state government­s, the money to fund the health emergency had not been forthcomin­g. She referred to the statement by the finance secretary a few days ago at a parliament­ary standing committee that the Centre was not in a position to give 14 per cent GST compensati­on to the states and said this was nothing short of betrayal. She expressed grave concern at the National Education Policy and wondered at the impact it would have on all levels of education.

Uddhav said the example of the US, where schools had been opening leading to a huge spike in infection was before India, as was the wanton disregard of the Centre of this aspect. “We have to decide whether we want to fear or fight the government. The people who elected the Bharatiya Janata Party at the Centre also elected all of us. But if we do something, it is paap (sin), and if they do anything, it is punya (virtue).”

He pointed out that while his state was gradually emerging from the lockdown, schools remained shut. “Opposition CMS should speak louder as the central government is trying to suppress our voice. We should decide whether we have to fight or fear the Centre,” said Uddhav.

Velu Narayanasa­my of Puducherry said infections will rise if entrance exams are permitted. “The exams are in September. Why should the lives of students be put at risk? We have written to Prime Minister Narendra Modi, but there has been no response,” said Mamata. Backing Mamata, Sonia said, “Students’ problems and exam issues were being dealt with uncaringly by the Centre.”

GST compensati­on was an issue flagged strongly. Captain Amarinder Singh (Punjab) said the state had already spent ~500 crore in managing the pandemic and had received no resources from the Centre. “Punjab’s financial situation was dire,” he said.

More on www.business-standard.com

“Announceme­nts such as those related to the National Education Policy should really worry the Opposition as they are a setback for secular and scientific values and reveal the ‘insensitiv­ity’ of the government” “We have to work together and fight together against the central government” SONIA GANDHI,

Congress president “Opposition chief ministers should speak louder as the central government is trying to suppress our voice” “We should decide whether we have to fight or fear the central government”

UDDHAV THACKERAY, Maharashtr­a CM “Ruling party using agencies against Opposition, underminin­g federal structure” HEMANT SOREN,

Jharkhand CM “States can jointly appeal against Supreme Court order on holding JEE/NEET examinatio­ns if the Centre decides not to do so” “State government­s ‘bulldozed’ by the Centre in the name of cooperativ­e federalism; we are fighting the battle” MAMATA BANERJEE, West Bengal CM

 ??  ??
 ??  ??
 ??  ??
 ??  ??

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from India