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regular-article-logo Tuesday, 30 April 2024

Calcutta HC orders CBI probe into teachers' recruitment in ninth and tenth standard

Justice Abhijit Ganguly provides the central agency with a free hand, says it can investigate any social or political person

Our Bureau Calcutta Published 07.04.22, 01:28 PM
Calcutta High Court

Calcutta High Court File picture

The Calcutta High Court on Thursday directed a CBI probe into the ninth and tenth standard teacher recruitment case. The court sought a report from the central agency by Friday, reported Anandabazar.com.

"The CBI can interrogate any social and political person if it wants, without any bias," Justice Abhijit Ganguly said, providing the agency with a free-hand. The CBI is likely to question Shanti Prasad Sinha and other members involved.

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A division bench of the Calcutta High Court last month had given a two-week stay on a single bench order to hold a CBI probe into the recruitment of teachers that has been stalled for the last six years for a number of reasons.

The directive had come on a day which marked the completion of 365 days, though staggered, of waiting for appointment letters by candidates who had appeared for the state-level selection test. They have been sitting, almost forgotten by the rest of the city, near the Gandhi statue on Mayo Road crossing in the maidan area to draw the attention of the government to largescale nepotism at work.

“The names of at least a few thousands were uploaded on the recommendations made by some members of the School Service Commission,” alleged Illyas Biswas, one of the agitators at the Gandhi statue. “If the state government removes the names of all those who were included on recommendations, at least 2,500-3,000 of us will get our jobs. That is what we want.”

Instead of teaching, Biswas, a resident of Nadia’s Chapra who had cleared the SLST that was held on November 27, 2016, has to be at Mayo Road from 10am to 5pm every day, praying for the court to intercede on their behalf or the government to change its mind.

The first 29 days were in front of the Press Club in Calcutta in March 2019.

“The chief minister met us. A committee was also formed to look into our grievances. Nothing came of it. Rather, it appeared that the committee was trying to undermine the movement,” said Biswas.

The assurances were made before the Lok Sabha polls and forgotten once the election was over. Next, the aspirants spent 187 days at Salt Lake’s Central Park since January 2021 and finally another 149 days at Mayo Road since October last year till now.

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