Hindustan Times ST (Mumbai)

Children attend a school in Srinagar on Monday.

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vent protests against the nullificat­ion of Article 370 and later due to a shutdown when the curbs were eased. The government announced a winter break on December 10.

Mohammad Ishaq, the father of a 13-year-old school-going daughter, said the break was so long that the school shoes his daughter wore six months back do not fit her anymore. “She wore the shoes after months and they were hurting her. I had to rush to a footwear shop in the morning to replace her shoes. That sums up the whole story of education here,” he said.

Athar Ahmad, a teacher and an administra­tor at a private school in Srinagar said he hoped the situation would continue to normal. “The students suffered a lot during these months. It has happened for the first time that schools remained closed for such a long period.”

Schools, colleges and universiti­es across Kashmir Valley were closed ahead of the nullificat­ion that ended provisions that prevented non-residents from buying land and getting jobs in the region. Hundreds of politician­s and activists were also detained ahead of the nullificat­ion that coincided with Jammu and Kashmir’s split into two Union territorie­s as well. Three former chief ministers, Omar Abdullah, Mehbooba Mufti, and Farooq Abdullah, are among the top politician­s under continued detention.

Despite no classwork since August, around 76% of students cleared the class 12 and 74.7% class 10 examinatio­ns held in October and November. “We had very good results which prove that the students studied very hard and that is why students are enthusiast­ic about joining classes of the new academic session,” Malik said.

(With PTI inputs)

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