The Asian Age

Kids ‘forced’ to drink sewer water

Bangladesh investigat­es whether school teacher punished students

-

Dhaka, Aug. 22: Bangladesh­i authoritie­s have ordered an investigat­ion after a primary school teacher was accused of forcing more than two dozen students to drink sewer water as a punishment, officials said on Monday.

Parents lodged a complaint against Shahnaz Parvin, a teacher from Jajira south of Dhaka, after several students fell ill.

Jajira’s government administra­tor, Rahela Rahmatulla­h, said an investigat­ion was underway into allegation­s 28 children had been forcefed drain water.

“We will take necessary legal steps if she is found to have breached rules,” she said.

The 25-year-old teacher denied forcing the children to drink the water, saying she was only trying to scare them after they failed to prepare for class.

Administra­tors at Gangaprasa­d Primary School described the teacher’s actions as “reprehensi­ble” and said they would await the outcome of the investigat­ion.

“Even scaring little children like that was absolutely inappropri­ate,” said Jajira education official Hafizur Rahman.

Students described being sick after Parvin passed around a jug of filthy water for them to drink.

“My teacher asked me to fetch a jug of water from the sewer. And then she fed it to the rest of the class,” one unidentifi­ed student told a daily newspaper.

The news has caused outrage in Bangladesh, where corporal punishment in schools was officially banned in 2010.

But beatings and other punishment­s are regularly meted out.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from India