On the second day of the National Conference, the organisational session began at the Triguna Sen auditorium at Jadavpur University with a 'John Henry' ballet mime performance by the Thakurnagar Cultural Association. Comrade Dipankar, General Secretary, CPI(ML), delivering the inaugural address, said that it is the duty of revolutionary student activists to free student politics from the clutches of the establishment and direct it towards the struggle of the toiling masses and for democracy.
Comrade Ravi Rai presented the draft document of the Conference. 309 delegates from 18 states attended the Conference, and discussed the document on the last day of the Conference. The draft was unanimously passed and a 95 member National Council was elected by the house. The National Council elected a 45-member National Executive and a 10 member office-bearer team. A 13-point resolution was also adopted by the house. Comrade Ravi Rai was re-elected General Secretary and Comrade Sandeep Singh was elected President.
Students on the Warpath against Coaching Mafia
On the night on February 8 at a crowded crossroad in Patnas Bazaar Samiti area famed for its coaching centres, two students held placards in their hands and raised slogans against coaching centre operator Neeraj Singh who had humiliated them by tearing up their identity cards and throwing them out of class when they asked a question. Within half an hour, thousands of students collected at the crossroads, targeting first Neeraj Singhs coaching institute and then other such institutes in the area. The ever-swelling flood of students made its way to other parts of the State capital. On 9 February, students targeted coaching institutes at Musallahpur, Naya Tola, Lal Bag, and Ramna Road. Coaching institutes run by K Singh and S K Mishra, and Kartar Coaching. A guard in the S K Mishra institute fired and killed a student Sachin Sharma (from Nalanda) on the spot. The killing made the students protests erupt in anger.
Students injured in the brutal police lathicharge were dumped in PMCH hospital where they received no treatment. A student Krishnakant Jha from Saharsa succumbed to injuries for lack of medical care.
The upsurge against these coaching institutes is the expression of long-simmering rage within students against commercialisation and sheer loot in the name of education. The episode has again exposed the reality behind the Nitish Governments tall claims of educational reforms. The fact is that a massive education business has mushroomed in the State capital, with a turnover of 1000 crore every year; and far from any government supervision or control, the whole exploitative business has protection and patronage of various ruling class parties. The coaching industry is an extremely unscrupulous one capitalising on students aspirations with faked statistics of successes in competitive exams, ads full of falsehoods, and baseless commendations procured by ruling politicians.
Nitish Kumars first response to the news of the upsurge was a flippant, Such things keep happening in Bihar.� Subsequently, he went into damage control mode, hurriedly announcing that a Bill to regulate the coaching industry would be introduced in the next Assembly session and getting the Patna DM to invite student representatives for a discussion.
But weak and superficial measures cannot address the problem the root of which lies in the governments policy of promoting privatisation and commercialisation of education.
Abhyuday