House to take up hill varsity bill
Darjeeling: The Bengal government will table a bill
in the Assembly on Tuesday to set up Greenfield University in the
Darjeeling hills whose academic calendar is different from that of the
plains.
Apart from the Greenfield University Bill, the government
will table four other bills to establish new universities in the state.
The four varsities are proposed for South Dinajpur, Murshidabad, East
Midnapore and Alipurduar.
Binay Tamang, the GTA head, said on
Monday: "We are thankful to the honourable chief minister, Mamata
Banerjee, and her cabinet for fulfilling the demand to set up a
university in the Darjeeling hills. The bill will be placed in the
Assembly tomorrow (Tuesday)."
Greenfield University will come up at Mungpoo, a place that was once
frequented by Rabindranath Tagore, which is situated about 30km from
Darjeeling town. The district administration has identified 100 acres of
land for the varsity at Jogighat in Mungpoo.
According to sources, apart from regular subjects, there are plans to
introduce subjects like management studies on tea, forestry,
mountaineering and earth studies.
Tamang said the demand for a
varsity for the hills had been first raised in 1955 with Darjeeling
municipality adopting a resolution and placing it before the state
government. "The North Bengal University was set up in 1962 and even
though it came up in Darjeeling district, it is located near Siliguri.
The demand was to have a university for the Darjeeling hills."
This
is largely because the academic calendar in the hills is different from
that of the plains. The hill curriculum calendar starts from March and
ends in November.
"After assuming charge of GTA in September
2017, we repeatedly made an appeal for the university," said Tamang who
hit out at the successive governments at the Centre.
"When the
GTA agreement was signed, the Congress government at the Centre agreed
to look into the demand for the varsity and made a mention of it in
annexure II of the GTA agreement. The BJP government did nothing on this
front apart from making it an election issue," said Tamang.
The Telegraph
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