Chennai:

The ‘language war‘ between Tamil Nadu and the centre – the contention that the BJP is trying to ‘impose Hindi‘ on the southern state in the guise of a National Education Policy – continued Wednesday afternoon with Chief Minister MK Stalin calling it a plan to develop Hindi rather than India.

Mr Stalin has led the state’s charge; this has included firing sharp attacks on Union Education Minister Dharmendra Pradhan, whom he last month accused of ‘blackmail’ by threatening to withhold funds and this week said was “arrogant” and “acting like a king”; after he used a pejorative to describe Tamilians.

On Wednesday evening the DMK leader stepped up his attacks, declaring at an event in Tiruvallur, “The National Education Policy is not education policy… it is a saffronisation policy.”

“The policy was not created to develop India… but to develop Hindi. We are opposing this policy as it will completely destroy the Tamil Nadu education system,” he said, emphasising what he has been saying over the past fortnight – that the centre denying Rs 2,150 crore for state-run schools, till the NEP is implemented, amounts to an attack on the nation’s federal structure.

In his speech Mr Stalin fired questions at Prime Minister Narendra Modi on this issue, claiming the centre is acting “like a dictatorship to destroy the rights of states and the federal structure”.

“You said you would give importance to states (when Mr Modi was campaigning to become the PM). But what have you done so far to give importance to federalism?” he asked, also accusing the BJP of taking “political revenge” for electoral defeats in Tamil Nadu in 2021 and 2024.

“We are asking for our share of taxes… which we paid with our efforts. What is the problem with this? Is it fair to threaten and not release funds for the welfare of 43 lakh schools? Because we don’t accept NEP, they are refusing to release funds that belong to Tamil Nadu…”

“We would have welcomed NEP if it brought everyone into education (i.e., increased school enrolment) But NEP removes people from education (i.e., the DMK claims it will disincentive Tamil students as Hindi will be ‘forced’ on them’). That is why we are opposing it…” he said.

The row over ‘Hindi imposition’ – a sensitive topic in the south, and particularly in Tamil Nadu, where ‘anti-Hindi’ riots broke out in the 1960s and which has always been opposed to the language being foisted on it – re-erupted last month with the BJP pushing its new policy.

The DMK, and its ally, the Congress, has argued Tamil Nadu – the second-largest state economy – has flourished under a two-language system that teaches Tamil and English.

The BJP, though, maintains its formula will benefit Tamil people travelling to other states.

It has said no student will be forced to learn Hindi as the third language, and has counter-accused the DMK of politicising the language issue ahead of next year’s Assembly election.

In an exclusive interview with NDTV last month, Mr Pradhan accused the DMK of creating a “false narrative” and depriving students of academic progress for their own political ends.

Much of the ‘language war’ face-off between the DMK and the BJP-led centre has revolved around Education Minister Dharmendra Pradhan’s claim the Tamil party had last year agreed to set up PM SHRI, or Schools for Rising India, institutions, but later went back on its words.

This, Mr Pradhan said in Parliament on Monday, showed the DMK to be “dishonest”.

In response the DMK filed a privilege motion against the Union Minister for making “factually incorrect” statements in the House. DMK MP Kanimozhi said the state had agreed to set up these schools but with certain conditions that were, eventually, not met.






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