After Tamil Nadu, Kerala CM opposes proposal to use Hindi as medium of instruction in all institutions
Vagisha Kaushik | October 12, 2022 | 11:52 AM IST | 2 mins read
Kerala Chief Minister Pinarayi Vijayan and Telangana minister KTR opposed "Hindi imposition" in IITs, KVs, other educational institutes.
NEW DELHI : Two days after Tamil Nadu Chief Minister MK Stalin opposed the union government’s proposal to use Hindi and other local languages as the medium of instruction in educational institutes in India, Kerala CM Pinarayi Vijayan also criticized the parliamentary panel recommendation.
In a tweet, Vijayan called the proposal “an onslaught on India’s cherished ideal, unity in diversity”. He argued that the “Hindi imposition” will disadvantage a vast majority of people in the country in matters of education and employment. “This callous move, an affront on cooperative federalism, has to be opposed unitedly,” he added.
Also Read | Amit Shah to launch Hindi medical education syllabus in Bhopal on October 16
Telangana minister KTR also disagreed with the proposal and said that the government is “flouting the federal spirit”. “India does NOT have a National language & Hindi is one among the many official languages. To impose Hindi by way of mandating in IITs & central Govt recruitments, NDA Govt is flouting the federal spirit. Indians should have a choice of language & we say No to Hindi Imposition,” the minister said in a tweet.
Earlier, Stalin had said that the Eighth Schedule to the Constitution has 22 languages including Tamil entitled to equal rights, and questioned what made “the Union home minister Amit Shah-led committee to recommend that Hindi be made the common language of India”.
In its 11th report presented to President Droupadi Murmu last month, the Committee of Parliament on Official Language, headed by Shah, recommended that local languages should be given preference over English in all states.
Also Read | Tripura indigenous organisations oppose move to make Hindi compulsory in northeast
The committee suggested that in all technical and non-technical institutions in the country, Hindi or local language should be used as the medium of instruction and the use of English should be made optional, as per a PTI report.
The end of compulsory English language question paper in the recruitment examinations and adequate arrangement for Hindi translation in the orders of the high courts in Hindi speaking states are among over 100 recommendations made by the committee in its latest report.
Follow us for the latest education news on colleges and universities, admission, courses, exams, research, education policies, study abroad and more..
To get in touch, write to us at news@careers360.com.
Next Story
]Featured News
]- Maharashtra hostels for SC, ST students run without wardens, overcrowded; some ‘bogus’: CAG report
- 'Diagnosed with SLD by accident’: Adults fighting ADHD, dyslexia, dyscalculia have neither measure nor relief
- Over 70% Indians in Germany find right job, fit into workforce, but language a major hurdle: Study
- AISHE Report: SC, ST faculty at just 10% and 3%, women drop from 44% at entry level to 27% at professor rank
- Has DST scrapped INSPIRE-SHE scholarship? No notice, list, budget or clarity leaves students wondering
- In National Pharmacy Commission Bill, exit test after B.Pharm, board for AYUSH and reduced state role
- UDISE+ 2025-26: SC, OBC enrolment hits 6-year low; over 8,000 govt schools shut in a year as 26 lakh drop out
- NIPER Hyderabad, Ahmedabad bet on COEs, revamping pharmacy syllabus with AI, med-tech courses: Director
- Visva Bharati Recruitment: Complaint to PM alleges DR selection records destroyed; varsity says ‘ridiculous’
- Sowa Rigpa: India’s Tibetan medicine students must know the language before they treat patients