Tripura indigenous organisations oppose move to make Hindi compulsory in northeast
Press Trust of India | April 30, 2022 | 11:34 AM IST | 2 mins read
RSKC, a conglomeration of 56 indigenous socio-cultural organizations of Tripura have opposed the move to make Hindi compulsory subject till Class 10 in northeastern states.
AGARTALA: The Roman Script for Kokborok-Choba (RSKC), a conglomeration of 56 indigenous socio-cultural organizations of Tripura have opposed the move to make Hindi a compulsory subject till Class 10 in the northeastern states.
RSKC president Bikash Roy Debbarma told reporters on Friday that "RSKC is neither against Hindi or Devanagari, but it strongly opposes the forceful imposition of Hindi language and Devanagari script in NE states in general and Tripura in particular." He said, “language is a state subject and RSKC is of the opinion that making Hindi compulsory in Northeast is nothing but blatant deviation from constitutional provision”. As far as the script is concerned, RSKC is opposed to the proposal of the Central government to impose Devanagari on languages not having their own scripts.
"The Union government can't dictate or impose Devanagari to any linguistic group against their will or choice. Right to choose is a constitutional guarantee which can't be snatched away", he said. Debbarma said the people of Northeast are peace-loving but making Hindi compulsory for NE people will be an "ill-move", which RSKC feels will be counter-productive. He further urged the Central government not to make Hindi compulsory in NE states and leave it to the people.
Also read | WBJEE 2022 Exam Live Updates: Paper Analysis, Answer Key, Question Papers, Marking Scheme
"The Indigenous people including Kokborok speaking people should be given the right to choose their script for their own mother tongue", he said. Responding to a question on what will be the script for Kokborok, Debbarma said "over 90 per cent of indigenous people prefer the Roman script for Kokborok." In Tripura, the script for Kokborok, the mother tongue of around 80 per cent of 19 indigenous tribes, could not be finalised yet even after the constitution of two language commissions earlier.
Also read | NEET: CMC Vellore’s 2022 MBBS batch is about to graduate; its size - 3 students
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
]- Study in India falls short on visa issues, curricula; NITI Aayog sets 5 lakh foreign students target for 2047
- JEE Advanced reports show IITs cut hundreds of BTech seats in core engineering; here’s what happened
- Exam déjà vu? AMU law faculty reuses last year’s BA LLB Hons question paper; students oppose retest
- Pre, Post-Matric Scholarships for minorities disbursed to thousands of ineligible or fake beneficiaries: CAG
- PMKVY: CAG flags missing names from Skill India scheme, 34 lakh losing payout due to poor NSDC oversight
- ‘IIM Ahmedabad Dubai is the brand ambassador of Indian education system in UAE’: Dean of new campus
- TISS Mumbai: More students seek help for relationship woes than studies; women prefer text, show helpline data
- Education budget utilisation has improved since Covid pandemic: Government data
- DU axe on Indian languages in BA Programme over empty seats; teachers blame CUET, vacancies
- Allahabad University, central institutes ‘bypass’ SC, ST hiring with ‘not found suitable’ excuse: Panel