MANF must stay: Kerala MPs attend MSF JNU's nationwide protest; students detained
Anu Parthiban | December 15, 2022 | 05:04 PM IST | 2 mins read
MANF scheme: Some of the protesting students were detained by the Delhi Police in front of the ministry of education office.
NEW DELHI: The Muslim Students Federation (MSF) of Jawaharlal Nehru University (JNU) today organised a nationwide protest against the Centre’s decision to discontinue the Maulana Azad National Fellowship (MANF) scheme. Some of the protesting students were detained by the Delhi Police in front of the ministry of education office, the students group claimed.
A large section of students of MSF-JNU were protesting against the cancellation of the scheme at Jantar Mantar today. The protesters raised slogans and carried posters that read, “MANF must stay!” and “Resist attack on education”.
Kerala MPs including ET Muhammed Basheer, MP Abdussamad, NK Premachandran addressed the protest gathering at Jantar Mantar, Delhi.
Student organisations and political leaders across the country expressed disappointment after the Union minority affairs minister Smriti Irani announced to stop the MANF scheme on December 9.
Smriti Irani said that “the MANF scheme overlaps with various other fellowship schemes for higher education being implemented by the Government and minority students are already covered under such schemes, hence the Government has decided to discontinue the MANF Scheme from 2022-23.”
Student organisations from Jawaharlal Nehru University (JNU), Jamia Millia Islamia (JMI) and Delhi University (DU) who staged demonstration days before were also allegedly manhandled by the Delhi Police .
Pre-matric scholarship
The central government’s decision to limit the pre-matric scholarship to just Classes 9 and 10 students was also not received well. The pre-matric scholarship used to also cover students of Classes 1 to 8 belonging to SC, ST, OBC and minority communities.
The government justified the move to only Class 9 and 10 under the scheme by underlining that the Right to Education (RTE) Act, 2009 makes it obligatory for the government to provide free and compulsory elementary education till Class 8.
Calling it a “blatant injustice”, the National Federation of Girls Islamic Organisation (GIO) had earlier said, “By eliminating minority scholarships, a concerted effort is being made to institutionally exclude socially backward communities from the education sector.”
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.
Quick Watch
]Next Story
]Featured News
]- NMC drafts rules to sideline states on medical college approvals, gets tougher on infrastructure norms
- From IIT Madras to Kharagpur: Why top engineering colleges are now teaching biomedical sciences
- VBSA Bill: Joint Parliamentary Committee to finalise, adopt draft report on July 17
- NCAHP push for uniform allied healthcare education slowed by missing state councils, implementation gaps
- 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, or clarity leaves students wondering
- In National Pharmacy Commission Bill, exit test after B.Pharm, board for AYUSH and reduced state role