Key Points

The UP minister Sanjay Kumar Nishad strongly criticized the Congress party's historical education policies. He argued that the party prevented rural populations from studying English for decades, hindering their progress. Nishad defended the current government's approach, emphasizing inclusivity and mainstream development through education. His remarks came as a direct response to Sonia Gandhi's critique of the National Education Policy.

Key Points: Sanjay Nishad Slams Sonia Gandhi's Education Policy Critique

  • Congress blocked rural English education for 60 years
  • Nishad criticizes previous education policies
  • Modi's approach promotes inclusive educational development
  • NEP aims to transform India's learning landscape
2 min read

Congress didn't let rural population study English: UP minister takes jibe at Sonia Gandhi's NEP remarks

UP Minister challenges Congress' education legacy, defends Modi's National Education Policy with sharp counterarguments

"The public takes the decisions and the public is the future of the country - Sanjay Kumar Nishad"

Prayagraj, March 31

With the Congress Parliamentary Party (CPP) chairperson Sonia Gandhi criticising the National Education Policy (NEP), Uttar Pradesh Minister Sanjay Kumar Nishad took a jibe at the Opposition party on Monday, claiming that the "public rejected Congress" because their own Education Policy was bad, as the party "did not allow rural population to study English."

"The public takes the decisions and the public is the future of the country, so public rejected Congress because their Education Policy was really bad. For 60 years, they didn't let the rural population study English. What Education Policy did they have?" the UP minister told ANI.

"Constitution was drafted in English. Medical, Engineering and other courses were in English. A large population of India lives in villages. But they didn't let them (study English)," he added.

Accusing the Congress of being a dishonest party, the minister said that the party did not implement the Right to Education (RTE) properly.

"Education is a fundamental right, but who can be more dishonest than Congress? That they said they will follow Supreme Court's order on Right to Education, they said that they will educate but won't take examinations, they took away people's merit," he added.

"Today with (PM) Modi ji, we are following international policies. Children of Muslims are becoming doctors and engineers, everyone's kids become educate. If someone gets educated, they join the mainstream development, our policy is that each section of society gets educated, don't fight with each other," UP Minister Nishad said.

Earlier in an opinion piece in The Hindu, Sonia Gandhi had launched a fierce critique on the Centre on the issue of NEP, accusing it of implementing its "three core agendas -- centralisation, commercialisation and communalisation" in an opinion piece published today. She accused the union government of shutting down public schools and pushing people out of the education system.

The National Education Policy, 2020 (NEP) aims to upgrade India's education system, with the aim of implementing a slew of reforms. The National Policy on Education has been introduce thrice in the country's history. First was in 1968, formulated under the leadership of former Prime Minister Indira Gandhi, the second policy was made in 1992 by under the P V Narasimha Rao-led government, a modification of the 1986 policy.

- ANI

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Reader Comments

R
Rajesh K.
Finally someone said it! My grandfather always told me how difficult it was to get English education in villages during Congress rule. NEP is bringing much-needed change 👏
P
Priya M.
Interesting points but I wish the minister provided more concrete data to support these claims. Education policy debates should be fact-based, not just political rhetoric.
A
Amit S.
As someone from a rural background, I can confirm English education was treated like some elite privilege before. Now my younger cousins are learning coding in English - game changer!
S
Sunita R.
Why always blame game? Both parties should work together to improve education. My kids' school still lacks basic infrastructure after 8 years of NEP promises 😔
V
Vikram J.
The real issue isn't just English - it's quality education in any language! My village school had teachers who never showed up. That's what needs fixing first.
N
Neha P.
Love seeing this discussion! Education is so important for our future. Hope we can move beyond politics and focus on what's best for students 🇮🇳

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