Wednesday, April 22, 2026
30.1 C
New Delhi

Despite opposition, J&K government assumes control of 215 Jamaat-linked schools

Despite opposition, J&K government assumes control of 215 Jamaat-linked schools

A security official stands guard outside a school at Wanabal Rawalpora, in Srinagar, Jammu and Kashmir.

SRINAGAR: A day after ordering the takeover of schools allegedly run by the banned Jamaat-e-Islami’s (JeI) educational organisation, Falah-e-Aam Trust (FAT), Jammu and Kashmir government moved swiftly on Saturday to enforce the directive despite opposition from all political parties, except BJP. A senior official said the principals of nearby government schools, backed by police and revenue staff, asserted administrative authority in all 215 JeI-linked schools across Kashmir.On Friday evening, J&K education secretary stated in its order directing the takeover that 215 schools had been identified by “intelligence agencies” that were “found to be directly or indirectly affiliated with proscribed organisation Jamaat-e-Islami (Jel)”.Former chief minister and PDP chief Mehbooba Mufti condemned the decision, saying Kashmiris voted the National Conference (NC) to office in the 2024 assembly elections to safeguard their interests, but the party has instead targeted schools that provided quality education in J&K.Her daughter Iltija Mufti said every time NC got a brute majority in J&K, their first target has always been the Jamaat-e-Islami. “Be it 1977 or even today, where they have taken it too far by jeopardising the future of thousands of students, leaving them in distress,” she said. Education minister Sakina Itoo defended the decision, saying the state had not taken over the schools but directed principals of nearby govt schools to “look after” them for three months, after which the order would be reviewed. She said her proposal was altered by the administrative secretary, who inserted “deputy commissioner” and “take over” in the order instead of “nearest principal” and “look after.” The order would be corrected, she said.Administrative secretary Ram Niwas Sharma did not respond to calls for comment.I too stressed that the decision was taken to safeguard the interests of the students and teachers. Intelligence agencies had given an adverse report on these schools eight years ago, leading to their deregistration. The latest order, she said, was meant to ensure that 55,000 students of these schools continue their education and teachers remain employed.Rejecting the criticism of political opponents, she said: “Where were they all these eight years when students and teachers of these schools were suffering because of deregistration?”Responding to the minister’s statement, PDP legislator Waheed Parra challenged her to “come clean and make her original proposal public for everyone to see”. Peoples Conference, Apni Party and Awami Ittehad Party also condemned the govt move.BJP, however, welcomed the decision to assume control of Jamaat schools. Altaf Thakur, the party’s J&K spokesman, called it a “much-needed intervention to ensure that young minds are shielded from separatist narratives”. It was “a bold decision”, Thakur said, alleging that these schools were a source of “separatism and terrorism” in J&K.The central govt had banned JeI in Feb 2019 under UAPA and declared it an unlawful association. Since then, authorities have carried out several crackdowns against the group.However, in last year’s assembly elections in J&K, several candidates affiliated with JeI contested under the banner of the Justice and Development Front (JDF), indicating the group’s return to electoral politics after a 35-year poll boycott. The JDF has now aligned with Sajad Lone’s Peoples Conference.

Go to Source

Hot this week

Token Wars: Why Crypto Billionaire Justin Sun Is Suing Trump’s World Liberty Financial For ‘Criminal Extortion’

The core of the dispute centres on an alleged attempt by World Liberty Financial to claw back or freeze tokens previously allocated to Sun Go to Source Read More

‘For acts against India, the response is assured’: Army on Pahalgam anniversary

NEW DELHI: On the first anniversary of the April 22 Pahalgam terror attack that claimed lives of 26 tourists, the Indian Army has issued a stern warning to the perpetrators of terrorism, asserting that when the “boundaries of humanity Read More

Army chief visits US command in Hawaii to bolster security architecture across Indo-Pacific

Army chief General Upendra Dwivedi on Wednesday made a high-level visit to the United States Army Pacific (USARPAC) at Fort Shafter, Hawaii, as both nations look to bolster security architecture across the Indo-Pacific. Read More

World’s first nuclear waste vault: Why Finland is burying radioactive waste 400 metres underground

Finland is on the verge of switching on what could become one of the most consequential infrastructure projects in the history of nuclear energy, a permanent underground repository designed to store highly radioactive waste for tens of Read More

Topics

Token Wars: Why Crypto Billionaire Justin Sun Is Suing Trump’s World Liberty Financial For ‘Criminal Extortion’

The core of the dispute centres on an alleged attempt by World Liberty Financial to claw back or freeze tokens previously allocated to Sun Go to Source Read More

‘For acts against India, the response is assured’: Army on Pahalgam anniversary

NEW DELHI: On the first anniversary of the April 22 Pahalgam terror attack that claimed lives of 26 tourists, the Indian Army has issued a stern warning to the perpetrators of terrorism, asserting that when the “boundaries of humanity Read More

Army chief visits US command in Hawaii to bolster security architecture across Indo-Pacific

Army chief General Upendra Dwivedi on Wednesday made a high-level visit to the United States Army Pacific (USARPAC) at Fort Shafter, Hawaii, as both nations look to bolster security architecture across the Indo-Pacific. Read More

World’s first nuclear waste vault: Why Finland is burying radioactive waste 400 metres underground

Finland is on the verge of switching on what could become one of the most consequential infrastructure projects in the history of nuclear energy, a permanent underground repository designed to store highly radioactive waste for tens of Read More

‘Bodol noy, bodla chai’: Didi flips 2011 election slogan

KOLKATA: A day before polling for the first of the two-phase assembly election in Bengal, Mamata Banerjee on Wednesday gave a “bodol noy, bodla chai (revenge, not change)” call, flipping her old slogan of “bodla noy Read More

Related Articles