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Chief Minister’s Siddaramaiah’s eagerness to position himself as a staunch Kannada supporter has led to the revival of a cultural policy, which has been in the backburner since 1996.
On Monday, the Karnataka cabinet approved a cultural policy for the state. If implemented, Karnataka will be the first state to have a comprehensive cultural policy in the country.
According to the chairman of the committee, Baragur Ramachandrappa, 44 recommendations have been made, along with policy guidelines for these recommendations.
Other recommendations of the committee include setting up of a committee to create awareness on communal harmony in areas which are prone to communal tensions. The policy also aims to promote plurality, and an important recommendation is set up a committee to consider bans on literary works.
The policy also aims at the formation of search committees to select chairpersons for various academies.
The plan to have a cultural policy was first formed during the Janata Dal government in 1996. In 2013, the Siddaramaiah government decided to have a comprehensive policy in this regard and set up a committee in August of that year. The six-member committee submitted the 68-page report with 44 recommendations in June 2014, which was put on hold.
The committee had in June 2014, submitted a 68-page report to the Karnataka cabinet. The cabinet has approved the policy in the backdrop of a strong pro-Kannada stand voiced by the Chief Minister, by rooting for issues like a separate state flag and removing Hindi signs in Metro stations.
According to the Law Minister, the details of the policy will be discussed at the next cabinet meeting, where orders will be passed for the implementation of the policy.
A Cabinet Sub-Committee headed by Minister for Rural Development and Panchayat Raj, HK Patil, was appointed to study the policy its financial requirements. On Monday, Cabinet Sub-Committee gave its go-ahead to the policy.
(This article was originally published in an arrangement with The News Minute.)
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