Kolkata, May 16 A day after being baton-charged by police, the protesting teachers have assembled again, surrounding Bikash Bhavan, the West Bengal Education Department's headquarters, on Friday morning.
Some of the protesting teachers with severe head and body injuries were also seen joining the protests.
Some of the protesters attempted to get inside the Bikash Bhavan premises by removing the barricades raised by police around the building at Salt Lake in Kolkata.
A police contingent from Bidhannagar Police Commissionerate has already reached the spot and is trying to control the situation.
The protesting teachers claimed that even if they face police assault again, they would continue with their protests till their last breath until their demands in the matter are fulfilled.
Their main demand is that the state government and West Bengal School Service Commission (WBSSC) should immediately publish lists segregating the "untainted" or "genuine" candidates from the "tainted" ones, who had paid money for getting school jobs.
They also alleged that the state government and WBSSC are "deliberately refraining from publishing the segregated lists to protect the untainted candidates".
The protesting "genuine" teachers started a gherao agitation on Thursday morning, cordoning off Bikash Bhavan from all sides. At around 10 p.m. on Thursday, a huge police contingent reached the spot and resorted to a massive baton charge to disperse the protesters, in which several protesting teachers were severely injured.
Although the "gherao" demonstration was dispersed, the protesting teachers assembled at a distance from Bikash Bhavan, continuing with their sit-in demonstration.
On April 3, the Supreme Court's division bench of erstwhile Chief Justice of India Sanjiv Khanna and Justice Sanjay Kumar had upheld a previous order by the Calcutta High Court's division bench of Justice Debangshu Basak and Justice Shabbar Rashidi cancelling 25,753 school jobs in West Bengal.
The Apex Court also accepted the observation of the Calcutta High Court that the entire panel of 25,753 candidates had to be cancelled because of the failure of the state government and the commission to segregate the “untainted| candidates from the "tainted" ones.
The state government and West Bengal School Service Commission (WBSSC) had already filed review petitions at the Apex Court on this issue.
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