Sunday, December 14, 2025
ADVT 
International

Akali Dal slams Punjab govt for spending Rs 35 crore on installing 25,000 plaques in schools

Darpan News Desk IANS, 07 Apr, 2025 03:33 PM
  • Akali Dal slams Punjab govt for spending Rs 35 crore on installing 25,000 plaques in schools

Chandigarh, April 7 (IANS) The Shiromani Akali Dal (SAD) on Monday said the Aam Aadmi Party government’s decision to spend Rs 35 crore in installing 25,000 plaques for minor projects in Punjab government schools and conduct functions to unveil them was a scam in the making.

In a statement here, party leader Daljit Singh Cheema said it was condemnable that Chief Minister Bhagwant Mann had handed over responsibility for conducting the minor works as well as bringing truck-loads of plaques and holding parent-teacher meetings to unveil the projects to party leaders from Delhi who were charged with corruption and had even done jail terms for various crimes.

"The AAP government has 92 legislators in the state Assembly, but it has not found anyone competent to lead the work and has given this responsibility to Delhi leader Manish Sisodia and others. The Chief Minister has been reduced to escorting the Delhi leaders to schools and hospitals. The outsiders, who have no stake in governance, are framing policies to run the schools and hospitals,” he said.

Asserting that the scheme was nothing but a naked attempt to funnel the state taxpayers' money to Delhi, Cheema said: "Everyone knows that the Delhi education model is a failed one. There is no sense in trying to replicate it in Punjab except to indulge in a scam through corrupt practices."

The Akali leader also condemned the manner in which government school teachers were being forced to put up plaques for extremely minor repair works, which amounted to wasting precious resources which could have been used to fill more than 60,000 vacancies, as well as introduce modern educational aids in the government schools.

Cheema also castigated the AAP government for forcing teachers to become social media workers of the government. He said teachers had been asked to open Twitter and Facebook accounts and share AAP government posts with hashtags as part of an exercise to divert the attention of the public from the failure of the government on all fronts.

"I appeal to Punjabis to rise up to safeguard the education sector and prevent the AAP government from destroying it by indulging in such stunts," he added.

MORE International ARTICLES

Video shows US cop joking about Indian student killed by fellow officer

Video shows US cop joking about Indian student killed by fellow officer
Jaahnavi Kandula, a 23-year-old student of Northeastern University campus in South Lake Union, was walking near Dexter Avenue North and Thomas Street when she was hit by a Seattle Police vehicle driven by Kevin Dave on January 23. In the brief clip, Seattle Police Officers’ Guild Vice President Daniel Auderer is seen driving and can be heard saying, "she had limited value", in a call with the guild’s president, Mike Solan, KIRO 7 news channel reported on Wednesday.

Video shows US cop joking about Indian student killed by fellow officer

Indian-origin cop in UK fired for using ‘unreasonable’ force to arrest man

Indian-origin cop in UK fired for using ‘unreasonable’ force to arrest man
Police Constable Mandeep Dharni, attached to the Met's North West Command Unit, appeared before a misconduct hearing last week for use of excessive force during an arrest at a car park in Barnet earlier this month, police said on Monday. It was alleged that Dharni failed to use the appropriate force and failed to act with authority, respect and courtesy when restraining a man, who was later charged with criminal damage and public order offences.

Indian-origin cop in UK fired for using ‘unreasonable’ force to arrest man

The US marks 22 years since 9/11 with tributes and tears, from ground zero to Alaska

The US marks 22 years since 9/11 with tributes and tears, from ground zero to Alaska
President Joe Biden was due at a ceremony on a military base in Anchorage, Alaska. His visit, en route to Washington from a trip to India and Vietnam, is a reminder that the impact of 9/11 was felt in every corner of the nation, however remote. Nearly 3,000 people were killed when hijacked planes crashed into the trade center, the Pentagon and a Pennsylvania field, in an attack that reshaped American foreign policy and domestic fears.  

The US marks 22 years since 9/11 with tributes and tears, from ground zero to Alaska

In U.S., Canada's 'game plan' for Trump all about stepping up the tempo of talks

In U.S., Canada's 'game plan' for Trump all about stepping up the tempo of talks
Canada's ambassador to Washington typically doesn't get a whole lot of notice before the president of the United States makes a decision with the potential to reverberate beyond the country's borders. But when President Joe Biden signed a measure to better ensure U.S. companies and workers reap the lion's share of the benefits of American research and development, Kirsten Hillman had known about it for nearly two months.

In U.S., Canada's 'game plan' for Trump all about stepping up the tempo of talks

Dangerous heat wave hits eastern US

Dangerous heat wave hits eastern US
A dangerous heat wave is baking the eastern US, with several cities breaking records and the heat stretching from Minnesota to Texas to Massachusetts. Meanwhile, temperatures could reach a scorching 37 degrees in Washington, D.C.; 31 in New York City; 36 in Raleigh, North Carolina; 33 in Minneapolis; 32 in Chicago; 37.7 in Oklahoma City; and 38 in Dallas and San Antonio.  

Dangerous heat wave hits eastern US

UK MPs urge Sunak to call for release of British Sikh held in India

UK MPs urge Sunak to call for release of British Sikh held in India
In a letter, the MPs urged Sunak to call on Prime Minister Narendra Modi to "immediately release" Jagtar Singh Johal, who has been "arbitrarily detained" for over five years in India, the BBC reported.

UK MPs urge Sunak to call for release of British Sikh held in India