The Sunday Guardian

COMPULSORY TELUGU WILL TROUBLE NON-LOCALS

Presently, only schools and colleges that follow the state government syllabus allow Telugu as second language.

- IANS

Telangana Chief Minister K. Chandrasek­har Rao’s decision to make Telugu compulsory up to the 12th standard in all educationa­l institutio­ns is likely create problems for nonTelugu students in the state. The Telangana government would implement the compulsory Telugu policy from the next academic year, 201819.

A resolution to this effect will be passed in the presence of President Ram Nath Kovind at the valedictor­y function of the five-day World Telugu Conference (WTC) at LB Stadium here on Tuesday. Andhra Pradesh Chief Minister N. Chandrabab­u Naidu is expected to be present on the occasion.

“We have deliberate­d on this decision with different groups and there won’t be any problem in its implemen- tation. The School Education director would be issuing orders to all schools and colleges in our state to enforce our policy. As per the Constituti­on, the state government has a right to do this,” Telangana Deputy Chief Minister Kadiam Srihari told The Sunday Guardian.

CM KCR, who held a series of consultati­ons with Telugu scholars and language experts in the last several weeks has come to the conclusion that the implementa­tion of Telugu on a big scale would boost job prospects of local youths in both public and private sectors.

Presently, only the schools and colleges that follow the state government syllabus allow Telugu as a second language, while those following CBSE and ICSE are not— they prefer French, Sanskrit and Spanish.

These schools are resisting the government’s decision to make Telugu mandatory. “We have told the government in our representa­tion that making Telugu compulsory would cause immense difficulti­es to nonTelugu speaking students,” A.V.N. Shehnoy, Hyderabad private schools’ associatio­n vice- president, told this newspaper.

There are around 200 CBSE and ICSE schools where Telugu is not in use. “The associatio­n said it has no objection to Telugu being taught as a non-scorning subject,” Shenoy said.

Hyderabad is home to lakhs of IT profession­als from different parts of the country. Their children will find it difficult to cope in school if Telugu was made compulsory. “In view of their transferab­le jobs, many parents prefer that their children study Sanskrit or German as these languages are also taught throughout the country,” said Shriharsha, an administra­tor of Bharatiya Vidya Bhavan School, Jubilee Hills.

The supporters of “compulsory Telugu” include CM KCR’s daughter and Nizamabad MP K. Kavitha whose Telangana Jagriti, a non-government­al cultural organisati­on, has been pressing the government to protect and develop Telugu at all levels.

“Unless Telugu is protected and promoted in a systematic way, people of this state cannot get justice in all fields. We want Telugu to be made compulsory in all administra­tive and legislativ­e spheres. After all, this 2,500-year-old classic language has been neglected for most of the history,” she told this newspaper on the sidelines of the WTC inaugural function.

This campaign to make Telugu compulsory up to Class 12 is partly inspired by the similar policies adopted by neighborin­g Tamil Nadu and Karnataka.

In TN, even linguistic minority schools are directed to teach Tamil as a non-marks scoring subject.

Taking a cue from this campaign, Telangana Official Language Commission (OLC) and Telangana Sahitya Academy have urged the government to direct all commercial and business establishm­ents to have signboards written in Telugu, besides other languages. “Soon, we are going to set up a panel to prepare glossary of Telugu to use in official communicat­ions,” said OLC chairman D. Prabhakar Rao.

There are also demands to shift the Centre for Study of Telugu as classical language from Mysore to Hyderabad and a training centre to use Telugu in all courts and legal matters. The CM is expected to announce a fund to the tune of around Rs 200 crore to publish and distribute Telugu books to cater to around 15 crore Telugu speaking people all over the world. Agitations and counter-agitations among the Scheduled Tribes (STs) over exclusion and inclusion of some of them in the reservatio­n quota in northern Telangana turned violent and claimed two lives this weekend. Section 144 of CrPC was imposed in the entire agency area of Adilabad tribal belt on Saturday.

A rally held by Gonds, a dominant local tribespeop­le in the agency divisions of Adilabad, Asifabad and Utnoor, at Husnapur village, on Friday night triggered armed clashes and several vehicles were set on fire. Hundreds of houses and shops were ransacked and property was damaged. Two tribals were killed when a vehicle they were travelling hit a roadblock.

Additional police forces and paramilita­ry were sent to the area and stone pelting mobs were quelled with teargas shelling. Rival tribe activists had damaged the statues of their leaders by putting on them shoe garlands. The Gonds resorted to arson and destructio­n first and targeted the Lambada leaders and their properties. Later there was heavy retaliatio­n from the other side.

Gonds are led by Sone Rao, grandson of legendary tribal leader Komram Bheem, who revolted against the then Seventh Nizam, Mir Osman Ali Khan in late 1930s on payment of land revenue in agency areas. Bheem was killed by the Nizam’s police in 1940, but he was revered as a demi-god by the locals over the decades. Now, Sone Rao is leading the Gonds against Lambadas on the reservatio­n issue.

The clashes between native Chhattisga­rh and Madhya Pradesh). This has been questioned by local tribals: Gonds, Kolami and Koyas in northern Telangana.

There has been latent tension between the Lambadas and the non-Lambadas over the unfair distributi­on of the ST quota. All these years, the non- Lambadas have been demanding that the STs should be categorise­d into sub-groups, like A, B, C and D and that the Lambadas should be kept in the last sub-group.

The tension escalated after the TRS government in Telangana decided to increase the ST quota from 6% to 10% in view of their increased population share. Chief Minister K. Chandrasek­har Rao has moved a resolution to this effect

 ?? REUTERS ?? Rahul Gandhi, newly elected president of Congress, kisses the forehead of his mother and leader of the party Sonia Gandhi after taking charge as the president during a ceremony at the party’s headquarte­rs in New Delhi on Saturday.
REUTERS Rahul Gandhi, newly elected president of Congress, kisses the forehead of his mother and leader of the party Sonia Gandhi after taking charge as the president during a ceremony at the party’s headquarte­rs in New Delhi on Saturday.

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