Crucial meeting between Bengal Education Minister with school job losers today

IANS April 11, 2025 508 views

The West Bengal Education Minister Bratya Basu is set to meet with a delegation of school job losers to discuss the recent Supreme Court ruling that cancelled thousands of teaching positions. The meeting comes as a relay hunger strike continues, highlighting the deep frustration among affected candidates. Representatives are demanding a transparent process to segregate genuine candidates from those who allegedly secured jobs through questionable means. The ongoing crisis reflects the complex challenges in West Bengal's education job recruitment system.

"We seek immediate publication of the mirror images of the optical marks recognition sheets" - Job Losers' Representative
Kolkata, April 11: West Bengal Education Minister Bratya Basu will meet the school job losers, whose relay hunger strike has entered the second day on Friday.

Key Points

1

Supreme Court cancels 25,753 school jobs in West Bengal

2

Relay hunger strike enters second day

3

Delegation demands transparent job review process

4

Minister Basu to explain government initiatives

The meeting will be held at Bikas Bhavan at 3 p.m.

At the meeting, Minister Basu is expected to explain to the delegation of the job losers the initiatives mooted by the state government to end the crisis.

Notably, the Supreme Court last week ordered cancellation of 25,753 teaching and non-teaching jobs in state-run schools in West Bengal. The ruling was given in the West Bengal School jobs case.

The relay hunger strike started on Thursday afternoon in front of the West Bengal School Service Commission (WBSSC) office at Salt Lake in Kolkata with just one teacher. Later, two other teachers, who also lost their jobs, joined the hunger strike.

As per information available so far, the delegation of teaching and non-teaching staff will have eight members, while two senior officials attached to the state Education Department and the WBSSC chairman Siddhartha Majumdar will accompany Minister Basu.

"The delegation is demanding immediate action by the state government and the commission to segregate the 'genuine' candidates from the 'tainted' ones who secured jobs by paying money. Besides, we seek immediate publication of the mirror images of the optical marks recognition sheets used in written examination for recruitment to make the segregation process more transparent," said a representative of an umbrella organisation created to carry forward the protests on this issue in the coming days.

The delegation members will also request the Minister Basu to ensure departmental actions against the cops of Kolkata Police who resorted to "unprovoked assault" on the protesting job losers in front of the office of the District Inspector of schools at Kasba in Kolkata on Wednesday.

Reader Comments

P
Priya S.
Finally some action being taken! These candidates have suffered enough. Hope the minister comes up with a fair solution today 🤞
R
Rahul K.
The whole recruitment process needs complete overhaul. How did so many fake candidates get through in the first place? This is a systemic failure.
S
Sunita M.
My cousin lost her job after 2 years of teaching. She's devastated. Hope they can quickly identify genuine candidates like her who worked honestly.
A
Amit D.
While I sympathize with genuine candidates, I think the minister should focus more on preventing future scams rather than just damage control. The education system deserves better.
N
Neha P.
The police assault on protestors was completely unacceptable! Those officers need to be held accountable too. Justice for all!
T
Tapan B.
Transparency is key here. Publishing the OMR sheets is a good demand - will help restore some faith in the system. Hope the meeting yields concrete results.

We welcome thoughtful discussions from our readers. Please keep comments respectful and on-topic.

Leave a Comment

Your email won't be published

Tags:
You May Like!