Key Points

In West Bengal, teachers deemed "untainted" by the CBI continue their protests despite the Supreme Court's decision to annul their appointments. The court action came after the state failed to distinguish between genuine and corrupt appointees, impacting the livelihoods of these teachers. The protesting group criticizes the government for protecting those involved in corruption instead of safeguarding legitimate teachers' rights. As a form of symbolic protest, they plan a march with a bare-body element to signify vulnerability and humiliation.

Key Points: Unaffected Teachers Vow Protests Amid West Bengal Recruitment

  • Supreme Court canceled entire job panel
  • Teachers cleared by CBI deemed "untainted"
  • Government failed to segregate corrupted from genuine appointees
  • Protests include symbolic bare-body march
2 min read

WBSSC job case: 'Untainted' teachers to continue protests despite fresh recruitment notification

West Bengal's "untainted" teachers, cleared by CBI, persist in protests after SC decision canceled their jobs.

"Our jobs and dignity have been stripped from us. - Chinmay Mondal, forum convenor"

Kolkata, May 30

Despite the West Bengal School Service Commission (WBSSC) issuing notifications on Friday morning for fresh recruitment of teachers for secondary and higher secondary schools, hundreds of “untainted” or “genuine” teachers -- whose appointments were cancelled by the Supreme Court last month -- have vowed to continue their protests.

These teachers, though declared "untainted" by the Central Bureau of Investigation (CBI), have found themselves in limbo after the Supreme Court annulled the entire panel of 25,753 teaching and non-teaching appointments.

The court took the step after the state government failed to publish a segregated list distinguishing “untainted” appointees from those who allegedly secured jobs through corrupt means.

This failure to act, the protesting teachers say, has cost them their livelihoods and dignity.

“The core of our protest is this -- why should genuine teachers like us, who have served with integrity for years and have been cleared by the CBI, be forced to sit for the examination again? And why did the government not publish the segregated list in time?” said a representative of Jogyo Shikshak-Shikshika Adhikar Mancha (Genuine Teachers’ Rights Forum), the umbrella body leading the movement.

The forum argues that the government’s reluctance to publish the list points to an attempt to shield the “tainted” rather than protect those who are innocent.

“This delay proves the government is more interested in protecting those who paid for jobs than in safeguarding the rights of genuine teachers like us. We’ve been left with no choice but to continue our protest,” the representative said.

As part of their ongoing agitation, the forum will organize a “March to the State Secretariat” rally on Friday. Protesters plan to keep parts of their bodies bare as a symbolic act to reflect the vulnerability and humiliation they feel.

“Our jobs and dignity have been stripped from us. So as a mark of symbolic protest, we will bare parts of our bodies during the rally to reflect that reality,” said Chinmay Mondal, convenor of the forum.

The teachers have been protesting on the streets for weeks, demanding reinstatement or at least exemption from the fresh recruitment process, citing their clean records and years of service.

- IANS

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Reader Comments

P
Priya K.
This is so unfair to genuine teachers! If CBI has cleared them, why make them suffer? Government should immediately reinstate them with back wages. Education department can't play with people's livelihoods like this. 😠
R
Rahul S.
While I sympathize with genuine teachers, the SC order was necessary to clean up the system. The real villains are those who sold jobs and corrupted the process. Hope the new recruitment will be transparent with proper oversight.
A
Ananya M.
As a parent, I'm worried about my child's education. Schools are suffering due to teacher shortages while qualified teachers protest on streets. Government must find middle path - maybe allow cleared teachers to continue while new recruitment happens?
S
Suresh P.
The symbolic protest of baring body parts is very powerful. Shows their desperation. But I wonder - why didn't the government act sooner? This mess could have been avoided if they had published the clean list when SC first asked. Typical bureaucratic delay!
M
Meena R.
This is why government jobs need complete digital transparency. From application to selection, everything should be online with proper audit trails. No scope for corruption then. Hope other states learn from Bengal's mistakes.

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