Millennium Post

DELHI GOVT EXTENDS MIDDAY MEAL SCHEME FOR GIRLS TILL CLASS XII

- OUR CORRESPOND­ENT

NEW DELHI: Come April, girl students up to Class XII in all Delhi government schools will get midday meal facility.

Girls of higher classes will now benefit from the midday meal scheme in the national Capital in a first-of-its-kind initiative in the country.

Starting from April, the Aam Aadmi Party (AAP) government will expand the midday meal scheme beyond primary and upper primary classes in all girls’ schools. In another major decision, the students will also find eggs and bananas on their plates as a part of the scheme.

This will be done with a view to fight malnourish­ment and anaemia, especially in female students. This is the first time in the country that a state government has extended the scheme to higher classes.

“A lot of children coming to the government schools are malnourish­ed. They might not be eating any protein. Many principals told us that students, after reaching Class IX, ask for midday meal. If a child has passed Class VIII, it doesn’t mean he/she has food available. For girls, it’s all the more substantia­l because even in deprived families, it’s the sons who would have first right over whatever resources are available,” said Atishi Mar- lena, advisor to deputy Chief Minister Manish Sisodia, who also holds the education portfolio. “Also, we will be providing one banana and one egg daily for all students. We want to target both nourishmen­t and expansion. The decision will be implemente­d from April 1 this year,” she said.

Currently, the midday meal scheme covers all primary classes of MCD and government schools and upper primary classes (till Class VIII) of the latter. The Delhi government will allocate a separate budget for this and the decisions are likely to be announced in the upcoming Budget session. Approximat­ely, an additional amount of Rs 50 crore will be spent in this scheme in comparison to last year. “We won’t be extending it to co-ed schools this year and also there are few co-ed schools in government system,” she said.

Under the scheme, a minimum of 450 calories and 12 gram of protein for children from Classes I-IV and 700 calories and 20 gram of protein for students of Classes VI-VIII is being provided.

At least six states — Telangana, Tamil Nadu, Bihar, Andhra Pradesh, Odisha, and Kerala — provide eggs as part of the nutritiona­l scheme.

Meanwhile, the government has also received suggestion­s from inspection teams on improving the quality of food served as part of the scheme like a mobile applicatio­n for inspection teams so that the data gets aggregated and can be used if there is any issue. Earlier this month, dead rats were found in the mid-day meal provided at the Government Boys’ Senior Secondary School in Deoli.

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