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The Gujarat government’s Education Department was rocked by a controversy last week, after it came to light that students of class X and class XII were specifically asked to identify their religion – but only if they were Muslim.
While filling out examination forms, students were asked to select whether they belonged to minority communities or not. If they said ‘yes’, the form then asks whether the student is ‘Muslim’ or ‘Other’.
The exam form in question has been in place since 2013, since the online form came into existence. Until the complaint by a parent last week, it seems nobody had noticed anything amiss. The Quint spoke with Gujarat school principals and the Principal Secretary of the Gujarat education board to find out how it happened.
Anisa Shaikh, principal of FD Girls School in old Ahmedabad, said that the online examination form filling system has been in place for five years. How did schools miss it?
“Earlier, these forms were filled by the admin department of the school and we only got the printouts of the list. Even we had no idea that the minority option on the form shows ‘Muslims’ and ‘Others’. We thought all options for minorities are open.”
Seema Nermeti, Principal of Shama School in Ahmedabad, explained it this way:
“Even in my school we missed this, because all these forms were filed by the clerks in our admin department. Most of our students come from Gujarati medium. Usually their parents get the forms filled out by the guys who run the local cybercafé, where no one is keen to check what information is being fed in. The parents too are unaware because they may have a problem understanding the language,” Nermeti said.
With over 1.7 million students gearing up to take the board exams next year, parents of Muslim students worry that the data could be misused in the future.
Principal Secretary (Higher & Technical Education) Anju Sharma, echoes what Gujarat Education Minister Bhupendrasinh Chudasama had said in an interview to Ahmedabad Mirror, in which he claimed there is nothing unusual about the Gujarat boards forms in particular, and that no complaints had previously been received.
About the safety of the data of Muslim students, Sharma told The Quint:
But even if no complaints had been lodged before, how did Gujarat’s Education Department entirely miss that only Muslim students were being asked to specify their religion?
The Quint reached out to state Education Minister Chudasama for an answer several times, with no response.
The Gujarat High Court on Wednesday issued a notice to the state government on a public interest litigation (PIL) alleging ‘religious profiling’ of Muslim candidates appearing for the board examinations.
Petitioner K R Koshty claimed every candidate applying online for Class 10 and 12 board examinations for 2019 has been asked to specify whether he or she is Muslim.
The PIL also challenged the government's decision to accept the forms online, saying that Internet connectivity in many parts of the state is poor. Further, the forms seek Aadhaar details which is against the Supreme Court's recent judgement, it said.
A division bench of acting Chief Justice Anant Dave and Justice Biren Vaishnav sought replies from the state government, Gujarat Secondary and Higher Secondary Education Board (GSHSEB) and Unique Identification Authority of India (UIDAI) by 6 December.
(with input from PTI)
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