advertisement
Three days after the Karnataka government cancelled financial aid to two private schools run by RSS strongman Kalladka Prabhakar Bhat, a massive protest was held by parents and students of the schools on Friday.
Hundreds of parents and students gathered on BC Road in Bantwal and shouted slogans against the government and Minister Ramanath Rai.
The two schools – Sri Rama Vidya Kendra located in Kalladka and Sri Devi Vidya Kendra – located in Punach, are run by Prabhakar Bhat’s trust.
Protesting parents and students claimed that Sri Rama Vidya Kendra was providing free mid-day meals, uniforms, textbooks for 2,126 students, for which the funds were being granted by the government since 2001.
Almost 94% of the schools' children come from poor backgrounds and hail from the Dalit, Adivasi and Backward Castes. It is not only these two schools but 52 other schools which the government is funding. But funds have been withdrawn for these two schools only,” one of the protesters alleged.
Alleging that the state government and the District In-Charge Minister Ramanath Rai has wronged the students, they demanded that the government reinstate the funds and threatened to intensify the agitation if their demands were not met.
On Wednesday, the Karnataka Muzrai Department, which controls the funds allocated to temples, withdrew the financial grant allotted to the Kollur Mookambika Temple. This is the same department that had allocated funds to the trust led by RSS leader Kalladka Prabhakar Bhat in Bantwal taluk of Dakshina Kannada district.
The temple, located in Udupi district had granted Rs 2.83 crore to the two schools during the BJP-JD(S) coalition government between 2007 and 2008. The funds were to be allotted till 2016-17 towards midday meals, textbooks and uniforms for students, after which the fund allocation agreement would be renewed.
The state government order, dated 31 July 2017, states that the adoption of the two schools—Sri Rama Vidya Kendra and Sri Devi Vidya Kendra—has been cancelled.
During the 10-year period, the temple had granted Rs 2.32 crore to Sri Rama Vidya Kendra and Rs 50.72 lakh to Sri Devi Vidya Kendra.
“These two schools were adopted by the temple based on the government’s order in 2007. This is not the only school we have adopted. There is one government-aided school in Kundapur and six unaided ones in Kundapur and Udupi,” said C Janardhan, Executive Officer of the Kollur Mookambika Temple.
According to Kalladka Prabhakar Bhat, poor students who were benefiting from the government grant have now been left in the lurch.
“The trust was getting rice and other items for the midday meals and textbooks. The temple had been giving us cash for the last three years and accounts have been maintained. This is just hate politics by Minister Ramanath Rai,” Bhat told the media.
(This article has been published in an arrangement with The News Minute.)
(Love your mother tongue? This Independence Day, tell The Quint why and how you love your bhasha. You may even win a BOL t-shirt! Sing, write, perform, spew poetry – whatever you like – in your mother tongue. Send us your BOL at bol@thequint.com or WhatsApp it to 9910181818.)
(At The Quint, we question everything. Play an active role in shaping our journalism by becoming a member today.)