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regular-article-logo Monday, 23 December 2024

Send Hindu children studying in madrasas to ordinary schools, NCPCR chief tells Madhya Pradesh govt

According to the information with the NCPCR, teachers at these madrasas do not have the B.Ed. degree and have not taken the Teacher Eligibility Test, Priyank Kanoongo claimed, adding that their infrastructure too is not in accordance with the RTE Act

PTI Bhopal Published 14.06.24, 08:57 PM
Representational image.

Representational image. File picture.

National Commission for Protection of Child Rights (NCPCR) chairperson Priyank Kanoongo on Friday asked the BJP government in Madhya Pradesh to shift Hindu children studying at madrasas to ordinary schools, stating that these Islamic institutions do not come under the Right to Education (RTE) Act.

As many as 9,417 Hindu children are studying at 1,755 registered madrasas in Madhya Pradesh, and these institutions lack infrastructure as mandated under the RTE Act, he said.

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He also said that Muslim children studying at unregistered madrasas too should be shifted to ordinary schools.

"I request the MP government to pull out Hindu children studying in madrasas," Kanoongo told reporters.

The NCPCR chief was here to hold meetings with various state departments with regard to protection of child rights.

"The Act under which the MP Madarsa Board came into being defines madrasas and clearly states that Islamic religious education should be imparted in them. Section 1 of the Right to Education Act excludes madrasas from the purview of the Right to Education Act," Kanoongo said.

According to the information with the NCPCR, teachers at these madrasas do not have the B.Ed. degree and have not taken the Teacher Eligibility Test, he claimed, adding that their infrastructure too is not in accordance with the RTE Act.

"The safety and security arrangements in madrasas are not up to the mark," he said, taking a strong exception to Hindu children being sent to madrasas.

"I request the MP government to immediately rectify it," Kanoongo said.

The child rights body chief further said that under the RTE Act, it is the government's job to set up schools, and "funding the Madrasa Board is like depriving the poor children of their Right to Education." "Muslim children who are studying in unregistered madrasas should also be immediately sent to (ordinary) schools," he added.

Except for the headline, this story has not been edited by The Telegraph Online staff and has been published from a syndicated feed.

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