19 January,2024 11:57 AM IST | New Delhi | mid-day online correspondent
Mallikarjun Kharge. File Pic
Congress president Mallikarjun Kharge on Friday hit out at the Modi government over the state of education in the country, and said India shall ensure justice for its students in 2024.
Mallikarjun Kharge slams Modi government: "We need 'Shiksha Kaal' for India"
"More than 'Amrit Kaal', we need 'Shiksha Kaal' for India," he said in a post on X.
"In 2024, India shall ensure NYAY for our students from the Modi Government, for its report card on 'Education' is marked with gross Failure," he said citing the Annual State of Education Report (ASER).
ALSO READ
Congress slams Nadda’s letter to Kharge, calls it a "4D exercise"
Indian Leaders pay homage to former PM Indira Gandhi on 107th birth anniversary
Rahul Gandhi shares childhood pic with Indira Gandhi on her birth anniversary
Mallikarjun Kharge urges voters to reject ‘50 khoke’ politics
EC writes to Nadda, Kharge over violation of Code of Conduct allegations
Quoting from the report, he said "56.7 percent of 14 to 18-year-old students in rural India can't do class 3 math and 26.5 percent of this age group still cannot read a class 2 level text fluently in their regional language".
He also noted that 25 percent of youth in the 17-18 age group have discontinued education, mostly due to "lack of interest".
Mallikarjun Kharge slams Modi government: "BJP is destroying the future of our young"
Mallikarjun Kharge also posted a 35-second video along with his post that alleged that the "BJP is destroying the future of our young."
Congress president Mallikarjun Kharge on Wednesday claimed the country is facing the risk of falling into a debt trap due to the policies of the Modi government and said the truth cannot be hidden behind the noise of "advertising tamashas".
Kharge said the IMF has "warned" the country over its high debt-to-GDP ratio of 81 per cent instead of the acceptable 60 per cent.
"The Modi government will present the last budget of its tenure in 15 days. Some facts - the savings of the country's families are at the lowest level in 50 years. This has fallen to 5.1 per cent of GDP.
"While the total debt of the government (fiscal deficit, central government: 5.9 per cent, State: 3.1 per cent) is estimated to be around 9 per cent.
"According to this, it is clear that the government alone will have to borrow more than what the families of the country are saving. This is most dangerous," he said in a post in Hindi on X.
According to IMF, he said, the Debt to GDP Ratio should be 60 per cent, "but it is currently at 81 per cent, and IMF has also warned on this, which the Modi government has habitually rejected."
"The Indian government is continuously getting ensnared in the debt trap. It may happen that like some big economies of the world, both our economy and the future of the country get entangled in a vicious circle and fall into big trouble," Kharge said.
The Congress president alleged that the Modi government boasts of spending more, but the reality is that 15 ministries have so far spent only 17.8 per cent of the last budget.
(With inputs from PTI)