12-01-2024
Bureau Report + Agencies
NEW DELHI: Authorities in India’s most populous state halted some payments this week to teachers of subjects such as mathematics and science in Muslim religious schools, known as madrasas, after the end of a federal government scheme.
The funding halt, affecting more than 21,000 teachers in Uttar Pradesh, comes as the government of Prime Minister Narendra Modi, which took office in 2014, sets its sights on winning a third straight term in general elections due by May.
According to a document seen by Reuters, India stopped funding the scheme in March 2022, having halted approvals of new proposals four years earlier.
But it was not immediately clear why the state government has only now stopped paying its share.
“The decision to stop this scheme will take us back to where we started,” Iftikhar Ahmed Javed, the chief of the state’s madrasa education board, told Reuters. “Muslim students and teachers will go back by 30 years.”
The office of Modi, whose government raised funding for the program to a record of about 3 billion rupees (US$36 million) in the financial year that ended in March 2016, did not respond to a request for comment.
India’s minority affairs ministry, which ran the program until it was closed, also did not respond to an email.
Teachers in Uttar Pradesh had not received the federal government’s share of scheme payments for the last six years, Javed told Modi in a letter on Wednesday, urging its revival but they “were doing their work smoothly in the hope your kindheartedness would resolve the issue,” added Javed, who is also the national secretary of the Minority Front in Modi’s Hindu nationalist Bharatiya Janata Party (BJP).
Muslims are a minority in mainly Hindu India, accounting for about 14 per cent of a population of 1.42 billion, and they make up nearly a fifth of the population of Uttar Pradesh, which is also run by the BJP.
Until now, the state paid a monthly sum of up to 3,000 rupees (US$36), as well as up to 12,000 rupees from the federal government, to more than 21,200 madrasa teachers of subjects such as science, Maths, social studies, Hindi and English.
A senior state information official offered no immediate comment on why Uttar Pradesh only halted payments this week.
The incident comes as authorities in the northeastern state of Assam, also ruled by the BJP, are converting hundreds of such Muslim religious schools into conventional schools, despite protests from the opposition and Muslim groups.
Many madrasas are funded by donations from members of the Muslim community.
Muslims and rights groups such as Human Rights Watch say nationalist groups have threatened and harassed religious minorities with impunity under the BJP, accusations the party denies.