City
Epaper

Priyanka Gandhi slams UP govt’s school merger plan, warns of Right to Education rollback for marginalised children

By IANS | Updated: July 14, 2025 17:09 IST

Lucknow, 14 July Senior Congress leader and Member of Parliament from Wayanad (Kerala) Priyanka Gandhi has sharply criticised ...

Open in App

Lucknow, 14 July Senior Congress leader and Member of Parliament from Wayanad (Kerala) Priyanka Gandhi has sharply criticised the Uttar Pradesh government’s decision to merge thousands of government schools, calling it a direct assault on the Right to Education and a blow to marginalised communities.

In a post on her official X handle, Priyanka Gandhi alleged that the Yogi Adityanath-led administration is preparing to shut down nearly 5,000 schools under the guise of rationalisation, while teacher organisations warn that the actual number could reach as high as 27,000.

The move, according to state officials, is part of a broader plan to consolidate schools with low enrollment—particularly those with fewer than 50 students—and merge them with nearby institutions to optimise resources and improve infrastructure.

However, critics argue that such consolidation will disproportionately affect children from Dalit, tribal, backward, and minority communities, many of whom rely on local schools for access to basic education.

Priyanka Gandhi invoked the legacy of the UPA government’s Right to Education Act, which mandated the establishment of schools within close proximity to every village to ensure that children from economically weaker sections could attend school without facing logistical barriers.

She questioned how young children, especially girls, would be expected to walk several kilometres to reach distant schools, warning that such a shift could lead to increased dropout rates and educational exclusion.

“This decision is not just administrative—it’s ideological,” Priyanka Gandhi wrote.

“It undermines the constitutional promise of education for all and threatens to push thousands of children out of the classroom.”

The Uttar Pradesh government has defended the plan, stating that it aims to address teacher shortages, underutilised infrastructure, and declining enrollment.

Education officials have instructed district administrators to submit merger proposals by mid-November, with considerations for transportation and geographic challenges.

Meanwhile, opposition parties and civil society groups have begun mobilising against the move, demanding transparency and a reassessment of its long-term impact.

The controversy has sparked a wider debate on educational equity, rural access, and the role of public schooling in social upliftment.

--IANS

sktr/dan

Disclaimer: This post has been auto-published from an agency feed without any modifications to the text and has not been reviewed by an editor

Open in App

Related Stories

InternationalPakistan: Man allegedly opens fire inside house; kills wife, two women, one minor

InternationalRussia launched 1300 drones, 1200 guided aerial bombs at Ukraine over past week: Zelenskyy

InternationalAt least 16 Epstein files removed from US Department of Justice website

EntertainmentAjay Devgn, Rajkummar Rao, Neil Nitin Mukesh attend Anand Pandit's birthday bash in style

AurangabadStepping Stones Jungle Book comes to life

National Realted Stories

NationalBihar: Bagaha's Suman Devi scripts success story of self-reliance, earns lakhs through beekeeping

National'Nation first must guide thought and action', Arunachal Guv tells NCC cadets

NationalTurn Yoga and meditation into a mass movement for a healthy, balanced society: Gujarat CM

NationalKCR announces mass movement over irrigation projects

NationalChains of Commerce: How Britain’s need for gold forced ‘circuitous route’ that crushed India’s trade (From the Archives)