Stop discrimination against students of minority communities in schools, colleges: AIFRTE
AIFRTE condemned incidents of MIT student being called a terrorist by professor and Sikh students in Punjab being asked to study in Khalistani schools.
Vagisha Kaushik | December 2, 2022 | 03:05 PM IST
NEW DELHI : The All India Forum for Right to Education (AIFRTE) has condemned the incidents of discrimination against students of religious minority communities in schools and universites. In a statement, the forum referred to incidents of Manipal Institute of Technology (MIT) student allegedly being called a terrorist and Sikh students being asked to study in Khalistani schools in Punjab.
“These are not isolated incidents. Students belonging to religious minority communities have been undergoing such bigotry in educational spaces and it is high time that educational institutes adopt a zero-tolerance policy towards such behaviour. Institutes have a tendency to downplay such incidents. Moreover, the outspokenness of students from marginalised communities is silenced in the name of ‘managing’ things. Such actions only help to maintain the existing hierarchical power relations. They alienate and exclude the students from minority communities,” read the AIFRTE statement.
Also Read | 'Undisguised assault on right to education': Forum on government’s move to limit pre-matric scholarship
Jagmohan Singh, forum chairperson and Madhu Prasad, spokesperson recalled the viral video where a student from MIT Bengaluru can be heard reprimanding his teacher for calling him by the name of a terrorist, Kasab. “The student makes it clear that the derogatory remark cannot be downplayed as a joke. We salute the courage of the student to raise the issue in the classroom itself as an incidence of islamophobia. The institute has been forced to condemn it and initiate an inquiry. They have debarred the lecturer from classes until the inquiry is over,” they said.
While talking about the Sikh students’ incident, they alleged that the teacher also spoke ill of the Sikh Gurus during class in a Ferozpur government school. The teacher has issued an apology but only after the students raised the issue in the media and protested outside the school along with their parents.
“AIFRTE stands fully in support and solidarity with students who have had to face such discriminatory behaviour in educational institutional spaces. Unfortunately, the frequency of such incidents has been on the rise because of the normalization of communal discrimination in public life, including by people in positions of power who make irresponsible and provocative statements,” the forum further said.
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
]- NTA Overhaul: 1,000 secure exam centres, biometrics to prevent fraud, question paper changes, suggests panel
- What changes in NEET UG? Experts’ panel suggests multi-stage exam, security overhaul, simpler process to NTA
- Use KVs, JNVs as NEET, JEE Main exam centres: High Level Committee on NTA
- Maharashtra cluster universities may now comprise only self-financed colleges; government tables Bill
- National Testing Agency exam count dropped by over 50% in 2024; lowest in 5 years
- NIOS Exams: Over 35,000 cheating cases reported since 2022, education ministry tells Lok Sabha
- South Asian University plans more online degrees, course, to start arts, management faculties
- ‘Take action’ on 22,298 unrecognised schools in UDISE Plus by March: Education ministry to states
- Study Abroad: Italy’s new student visa rules may cause delays for Indian student
- Board Exams: States agree to equivalence; no question paper ‘jumbling’ from next year, says PARAKH CEO