People's Democracy(Weekly Organ of the Communist Party of India (Marxist) |
Vol.
XXVIII
No. 29 July 18, 2004 |
SFI
Formulates Charter Of Demands
National
Convention On Education Held In Delhi
THE
two-day all India convention on education organised by the Students’
Federation of India (SFI) resolved to intensify the students’ movement on
various issues in order to pressurise the UPA government to respect the mandate
of the people. It also formulated a charter of demands relating to education,
which was presented to the union minister for human resources development, Arjun
Singh, immediately after the conclusion of the convention (see accompanying
box).
The
convention, held in the Constitution Club, New Delhi, was inaugurated by
renowned historian, Professor Irfan Habib on July 13 and was attended by over
150 delegates from various states of India. The convention decided to support
all positive initiatives of the UPA government while not hesitating to oppose
any policy which goes against the interests of the student community. The
inaugural session was presided over by SFI president, K K Ragesh, who explained
the significance of the convention and hoped it would galvanise the students for
future struggles on students’ issues.
Professor
Irfan Habib, in his inaugural speech, argued that our education sector is facing
severe problems, which were not just in terms of low government expenditure on
education but also related to the content of education. The role of education
should be to inculcate modern scientific thought and not religious values. At
the same time Professor Habib felt that the present government has made
superficial changes without reversing the major policies of the BJP-led
government. It has not scrapped the National Curriculum Framework which had
promotion of religious values as one of the objectives of our education. More
glaringly the government was hesitating to scrap the communalised history
textbooks, rewritten during the BJP rule. Professor Habib called on progressive
forces to launch struggles to force the UPA government to respect the mandate of
the people.
Another
speaker, Professor Jayati Ghosh, termed the previous NDA government as the most
neo-liberal government the country had, which systematically undermined public
education. It had not only pushed for privatisation of education, reduction of
funds for primary as well as higher education even while thrusting peculiar
subjects like Astrology and Vedic Science on the students. Commenting on the
union budget 2004-05, Professor Jayati Ghosh felt the allocations for education
were insufficient. The central government was not taking enough steps in order
to help the state governments overcome their financial problems. She highlighted
how by undermining basic subjects like history, literature and social sciences
the students are not being allowed to be critical and form their independent
views. This, she said, happens across the world and hence undermines change in
society.
She
ended her speech by calling on the student community to focus on these main
issues:
Oppose
privatisation
Re-affirm
importance of humanities subjects
Fight
for more resources in education
Fight
for better quality of education
Jobs
for all
SFI
general secretary, Kallol Roy, while lauding the role of students in ousting the
earlier NDA regime, also reminded that the struggle was far from over. He said
that the need of the hour was to pressurise the present government to respect
the mandate of the people by intensifying the students’ movement on different
issues.
Former
SFI president, Sitaram Yechury, and Professor K K Theeckedath were also present
at the inaugural session.
Addressing
the convention on its second day, CPI(M) Polit Bureau member, Sitaram Yechury,
urged members of the SFI to play an active role in ensuring that the present
government sticks to the commitments made in the Common Minimum Programme,
especially the promise of stepping up government expenditure on education to 6
per cent of GDP. While welcoming the proposal for the education cess in the
budget, he said that certain proposals contained in the budget do not represent
the aspirations of the people as reflected in the electoral mandate.
He said that the students and youth of our country, who played a major
role in ensuring the defeat of the BJP-led government at the centre, must build
pressure upon the new government through movements in order to fulfil their
legitimate demands regarding a massive expansion of education in the country and
generation of adequate employment opportunities. CPI(M) leader in Rajya Sabha,
Nilotpal Basu, in his speech stressed upon the need for ideologically
strengthening the organisation.
After
detailed deliberations in the convention, a charter of demands was formulated.
It was submitted as a memorandum to the union HRD minister following a
procession from the convention venue at the Constitution Club to the HRD
ministry. Over 500 students from Delhi and neighbouring states like Haryana,
Punjab and Uttaranchal took part in the procession. The students later
demonstrated at the HRD ministry against the inadequate outlay on education in
the budget, especially the neglect of higher education. The immediate demand
raised in the memorandum submitted to the HRD minister was to scrap the
communally rewritten textbooks of the NCERT and reinstate the old textbooks
instead of commissioning a totally unwarranted rewriting of books all over
again.
Various other demands regarding reversing the policies of
commercialisation of education were also placed. The convention decided that the
SFI, while supporting all positive initiatives of the UPA government would not
hesitate to launch agitations and struggles against policies that go against the
interests of the student community.