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The battle between parents protesting the school fee hike in Khaitan Public School Ghaziabad, and the school authorities, escalated on Sunday when the Ghaziabad police lodged an FIR against four protesting parents. This came after distressed parents gathered outside the school on Saturday to express their resentment against the expulsion of as many as 35 students who were issued Transfer Certificates (TCs) for non-payment of dues.
The parents were booked after the school’s administrative officer filed a complaint against them for locking the school gates, thereby confining school staff inside the premises.
Consequently, an FIR was registered under sections 147 (rioting), 342 (wrongful confinement), 504 (intentional insult with intent to provoke breach of peace) and 506 (criminal intimidation) of the Indian Penal Code (IPC).
It was on Saturday afternoon that almost 200 parents stood outside the school complex with posters in their hands, shouting slogans against the school management and locking all the exit gates of the school.
Despite action being taken against them on Sunday, parents maintain that they will protest against the school until the district authorities step in to revoke the TCs.
“The tuition fee has been hiked by 51 percent. What the school has essentially done is to club the annual fee with the tuition fee. There wasn’t any justification provided for the hike,” Shivani Jain, a parent, tells us. “The management is acting like a monarch,” Neeraj adds. “Issuing TCs to students between class 1 and 8 violates the Right to Education Act of 2009. We have approached district authorities about the same. The matter is under consideration with the state committee and the school management cannot take a decision on its own,” he tells The Quint.
While parents asserted that the move puts the future of their children at risk, the school maintains its stance, saying that parents were given enough notice about the hike.
Varshney added that not only will the school not revoke the TCs, but it is planning to issue them to 30 other students.
Asked about the school’s decision to consider revoking the expulsions, Varshney told The Times of India:
While both the school authorities and the parents held a meeting on Saturday which was moderated by the Sahibabad police, parents are now demanding an urgent hearing of the matter, asking for the involvement of Uttar Pradesh Chief Minister Yogi Adityanath. “We met with the Superintendent of Police to talk about the issue. We have approached Adityanath to look into the matter as well. We are sure they will step in,” Sandeep Gupta, a parent, tells The Quint.
Meanwhile, Assistant Superintendent of Police Anoop Singh assured parents of a meeting before schools open after summer vacations on 3 July.
Parents and schools across the country have been at loggerheads over fee hikes since the beginning of April this year. With some of the schools in the Delhi-NCR region hiking the fee by as much as 200%, the issue has escalated to a point where none of the stakeholders are agreeing to budge from their stance. Will the government authorities, both at the state and central level, step in to save the day?
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