In a letter addressed to chief secretaries of states and union territories, NCPCR Chairman Priyank Kanungo also advised that non-Muslim children currently enrolled in madrassas be taken to mainstream schools in line with the Right to Education (RTE) Act 2009. Let’s go.
The National Commission for Protection of Child Rights (NCPCR) has recommended that all states and union territories stop funding to madrassa boards and subsequently close them down as well. In a letter addressed to chief secretaries of states and union territories, NCPCR Chairman Priyank Kanungo also advised that non-Muslim children currently enrolled in madrassas be taken to mainstream schools in line with the Right to Education (RTE) Act 2009. Let’s go.
These recommendations are based on a comprehensive report prepared after studying the educational conditions of children from the Muslim community. According to Kanungo, the report aims to lay out a road map to ensure that all children in India grow up in a safe and productive environment and ultimately contribute to national development. The letter said that this report has been prepared with the aim of guiding us towards creating a comprehensive roadmap that ensures that all children across the country grow up in a safe, healthy and productive environment. By doing so, they will be empowered to contribute meaningfully to the nation building process in a more holistic and effective manner.
At the same time, Priyank Kanungo said that the Commission has studied this issue for the last nine years and has researched how children of Muslim community are deprived of school education due to madrassas, in which details of violation of their rights have been given. . We have sent a report on this matter through letters to the Chief Secretaries and requested them to close the Madrasa Board in their respective states. These Madrassa Boards have failed to fulfill the purpose for which they were established.
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