The Sunday Guardian

Minority Ministry’s Nai Udaan helps 22 candidates clear UPSC

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Mohammad Aqib, 25, who got the rank of 579 and belongs to Sant Kabir Nagar, Uttar Pradesh, told The Sunday Guardian that the financial assistance helped him in clearing the examinatio­ns as he was able to prepare while knowing that he was not putting any extra burden on his father who was a farmer. “I have an extended family and my father also has to take care of my sisters and brothers. The assistance helped me a lot in studying with a free mind,” said Aqib, who completed his graduation from IIT, Chennai.

Ravi Jain, who came 9th, said that he bought a test series from the money he was provided under the scheme. “I was staying in Delhi and preparing for the Mains. The assistance helped a lot as I had money to take care of the preparatio­ns that included the test series that costs Rs 16,000. I also used the assistance money to buy a suit for the interview,” said Jain, who comes from Deoghar, Jharkhand.

The scheme can be availed of only once and is applicable to candidates whose annual family income from all sources does not exceed Rs 4.50 lakh. The scheme is the brainchild of Mukhar Abbas Naqvi, Union Minister for Minority Affairs.

Similarly, Mohammad Nawas Sharif Uddin, 29, who hails from Kargil and got a rank of 778, said that the assistance helped him in staying in Delhi and preparing for the Mains and the interviews. “My father is a retired government employee. It would have been very difficult for me to prepare for the mock interviews by staying in Delhi, so far from home, if I did not have the assistance under the scheme,” he said. A veterinary science graduate, Nawas said that a major part of the money was spent on writing tests for the Mains.

Jharkhand’s Jamshedpur-based Shabbir Alam, who got 403rd rank, said that he invested a lot of the money he got on buying books for the Mains examinatio­ns. “Preparing for the UPSC has become very costly. The financial assistance helps a lot, especially when it comes to buying books that are very expensive.

I was able to focus more on my studies rather than worry about how to arrange for the money,” he said.

According to Ahmed Bilal Anwar, 25, who got a rank of 332 in UPSC 2019, the assistance took care of the financial insecurity which one faces while preparing for the examinatio­ns. “It impacted my confidence level in a positive way and had a psychologi­cal impact as I was able to invest on test series and other material without thinking about how my father would be able to arrange it,” Anwar, who hails from Darbhanga, Bihar, recalled.

Mukhar Abbas Naqvi, Minister for Minority Affairs, told The Sunday Guardian that the success of the “Nai Udaan” scheme showed the Narendra Modi government’s resolute and effective efforts for “promotion and progress” of meritoriou­s youths from the minority communitie­s.

“The Ministry of Minority Affairs is implementi­ng a largescale free-coaching programme for meritoriou­s youths belonging to six notified minority communitie­s preparing for the UPSC examinatio­ns. We are providing free coaching under ‘Nai Udaan’, ‘Naya Savera’ to minority youths preparing for Civil Services, other UPSC examinatio­ns, medical, engineerin­g, banking, administra­tive examinatio­ns and other competitiv­e examinatio­ns, through various institutio­ns and organisati­ons,” he told The Sunday Guardian.

As per ministry officials, one candidate has also been selected in the UPSC this year after receiving a free coaching programme being run by the Haj Committee of India. In all, 145 candidates belonging to minority communitie­s have been selected in the prestigiou­s Civil Services, and they include 40 candidates from the Muslim community. A total of 829 candidates have qualified for the UPSC jobs, the results of which were declared on 4 August. According to Naqvi, his ministry was focused on improving the level of education among the minority communitie­s, and this was starting to show results. “The Modi government’s efforts towards educationa­l empowermen­t have resulted in a significan­t decrease in school dropout rate, especially among girl students. Before 2014, only 2 crore 94 lakh minority students had been given scholarshi­ps and middlemen were dominating the system. In the last six years, 4 crore 60 lakh minority students, who include about 60% girl students, have been provided different scholarshi­ps by the Ministry. In the last six years, more than 10 lakh people from the minority communitie­s have been provided employment and employment opportunit­ies through employment-oriented skill developmen­t schemes such as ‘Hunar Haat’, ‘Seekho Aur Kamao’, ‘Garib Nawaz Swarojgar Yojana’, ‘Usttad’, ‘Naimanzil’,” he added.

“We are working on a rapid pace to secure Waqf properties. Records of more than six lakh registered Waqf properties across the country have been digitised. Geomapping of all the Waqf properties is going on at a war-footing and the process of geo-mapping of all Waqf properties will be completed in the next two years.

Geo-mapping will ensure these Waqf properties are utilised for socio-economic and educationa­l empowermen­t of society. For the first time after Independen­ce, the Central government is giving 100% funding to establish schools, colleges, girls’ hostels, ITIS, polytechni­cs, common service centres, Hunar Hubs etc on Waqf properties under the Pradhan Mantri Jan Vikas Karykram (PMJVK),” Naqvi said.

During the last six years, under the PMJVK, which focuses on districts with substantia­l minority population, the ministry has developed 1,512 new school buildings, 22,514 additional class rooms, 630 hostels, 152 residentia­l schools, 8,820 smart class rooms (including those in Kendriya Vidyalayas), 32 colleges, 94 ITIS, 13 polytechni­cs, two Navodaya Vidyalayas, 403 multi-purpose community centre “Sadbhav Mandap”, 598 market sheds, 2,842 toilet and water facilities, 135 common service centres, 22 working women’s hostels, 1,717 health projects, five hospitals, eight Hunar Hubs and 5,956 Anganwadi Centres.

 ??  ?? Union Minister for Minority Affairs Mukhar Abbas Naqvi felicitate­s a candidate for clearing the UPSC examinatio­ns, in New Delhi, as Union ministers Jitendra Singh and Kiren Rijiju look on.
Union Minister for Minority Affairs Mukhar Abbas Naqvi felicitate­s a candidate for clearing the UPSC examinatio­ns, in New Delhi, as Union ministers Jitendra Singh and Kiren Rijiju look on.

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