Institutions advised against observing Partition horror day
Higher Education Minister R. Bindu told mediapersons on Wednesday that official instructions have been issued through the Directorate of Collegiate Education and the Directorate of Technical Education.
Raj Bhavan had issued a directive asking all universities to observe the day, which falls on August 14, the eve of Independence Day. However, the Minister said the State government does not support conducting such programmes on university campuses.
'It is the view of the Kerala government that such programmes need not be conducted on our campuses. Such events run the risk of being transformed into platforms for religious hatred and social division, which contradict the principles upheld by the State's educational policy,' Dr. Bindu said.
Independence Day is marked in Kerala every year with the focus on positive values to celebrate the unmatched contributions of freedom fighters and the inclusive ideals enshrined in the Constitution. 'To suddenly introduce a programme under the label of 'partition horrors' would inevitably lead to communal polarisation,' the Minister cautioned.
Leader of the Opposition V.D. Satheesan reiterated his strong criticism of the Governor's directive, calling it a serious mistake and part of a larger agenda by the Sangh Parivar to divide the nation.
He accused the Governor of attempting to implement a divisive agenda in line with the ideology of the Rashtriya Swayamsevak Sangh. 'They have now introduced a new tool, the fear of partition, to create communal divides among the people. The BJP's earlier attempts to pit Christian and Muslim communities against each other have already been exposed. When that failed, they came out with this new narrative,' the Congress leader alleged.
Meanwhile, the Students Federation of India (SFI) held demonstrations across the State against the efforts to observe the 'Partition horror day.'
The effigies of both the Governor and the Vice-Chancellor were burnt on the Kerala University campus. The BJP-backed Syndicate members condemned the incident.
Hashtags

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles


Hindustan Times
7 minutes ago
- Hindustan Times
Independence Day 2025 LIVE updates: President Murmu hails Operation Sindoor in address to nation
Independence Day 2025 LIVE Updates: Preparations for the celebration of the 79th Independence Day in the national capital are in full swing. The Delhi Police have issued a traffic advisory that will be in place from 4 am to 10 am. Traffic on several key routes will be restricted or diverted on Friday. ...Read More Several roads around Red Fort will be closed to general traffic tomorrow, inlcluding Netaji Subhash Marg from Delhi Gate to Chatta Rail, Lothian Road from GPO Delhi to Chatta Rail, and SP Mukherjee Marg from HC Sen Marg to Yamuna Bazar Chowk. Security has also been beefed up across the city to ensure that the Independence Day celebrations are conducted smoothly. Snipers will be deployed at high-rise buildings, heightened camera surveillance across the city and more than 11,000 security personnel and 3,000 traffic police for security in and around the Red Fort, reported PTI. President Droupadi Murmu addressed the nation on the eve Independence Day on Thursday and condemned the "cowardly and utterly inhuman" terror attack in Pahalgam that happened on April 22. She also lauded the armed forces for demonstrated "strategic clarity and technical capability" by destroying terrorist infrastructure across the border.


Hans India
8 minutes ago
- Hans India
Punjab: Contractual employees of state-run buses go off road; commuters hit
Chandigarh: Commuters across Punjab faced inconvenience as contractual employees of the state-owned Punjab Roadways, Pepsu Road Transport Corporation (PRTC), and Punbus went on an indefinite strike on Thursday against the Aam Aadmi Party (AAP government, demanding the regularisation of contractual employees and addressing their long-standing issues. Protestors did not allow buses of Punjab Roadways and Punbus to ply in several towns and cities. The worst affected places were Ludhiana, Jalandhar, Patiala, Amritsar, Bathinda, Ferozepur and Moga. Nearly 8,000 employees of Punjab Roadways, PRTC and Punbus were on strike. Bus services on inter-state routes and within the state were affected, officials said. Harkesh Kumar, senior vice-president of the PRTC, Punbus and Punjab Roadways contract workers unions, said apart from scrapping tenders under the kilometre scheme for private players, the unions had alleged that Transport Minister Laljit Bhullar had failed to fulfil their demands. After Wednesday, the government called for another round of meetings with union leaders here on Thursday to end the dialogue. The protesters held demonstrations at 27 bus depots, raising slogans against the government. Kumar threatened to gherao Chief Minister Bhagwant Mann during the state-level Independence Day function in Faridkot. 'Our demands are simple. We urge the government to regularise all contractual staff and end the draconian guidelines.' Government functionary Jasdeep Singh Lalli said while PRTC operates 1,200 buses, Punjab Roadways has around 1,600, and no new buses have been added to the PRTC fleet in the past four years. He said the government pays taxes for routes of 5,000 km each month where no buses are currently operating. Another union leader, Shamsher Singh, said, 'The department hasn't credited our monthly salaries. How are we supposed to celebrate the festival without our dues? They claim the funds have been released, but nothing has reached our accounts.'


Indian Express
8 minutes ago
- Indian Express
‘We need to stay away from the British divide and rule policy': Tripura CM Manik Sahan ahead of I-Day
Ahead of Independence Day, Tripura Chief Minister Manik Saha on Thursday urged everyone to learn from the history of the Partition, stay united to protect India from division, and work together to achieve the dream of Viksit Bharat by 2047. 'We need to think about the kind of problems that occur due to division. If we are not united in the future and the country is divided again, what will be the situation? So, to keep brotherhood intact, the prime minister has set the target of Ek Bharat Shreshtha Bharat. Along the lines of the Viksit Bharat 2047 dream that the PM has seen, we are also trying to create a Viksit Tripura. It will be possible if we work together,' he said while speaking at a Partition Horrors Remembrance Day event at Maharaja Bir Bikram College in Agartala. 'Even today, such incidents happen in our society. Riots were orchestrated in different ways… Having learnt lessons from history, we will not allow division. We need to stay away from the British divide and rule policy,' he said. Recalling the struggle for independence, Saha said many people were killed, many women were raped, many children were still missing, and many people were displaced. 'We always think about ourselves. But what we are required to do for our state and country does not come to our mind. In the era of social media, we learn about the entire world… Pages of history never get dull. If we read history, it teaches us many things about our present and future,' he said. Saha said the British policy of 'divide and rule' had led to Hindu-Muslim riots. 'Such riots don't happen because of religion, but the real reason is political,' the BJP leader said. Saha later wrote on X that the Partition was a painful scar inflicted on the body of a newly independent nation, adding that the then rulers divided the nation for their own interests, 'driven by the two-nation theory'. 'To bring this traumatic chapter to the forefront for the new generation, today addressed the main event of the 'Partition Horrors Remembrance Day' organized by the Higher Education department at the Rabindra Hall of Maharaja Bir Bikram College,' he wrote. Saha further wrote that the Kashmiri Pandits faced persecution at the hands of militants and Jana Sangh founder Syama Prasad Mookerjee never wanted the Partition but said that if India was to be divided, Bengal had to be divided. 'It's because of him, the Hindu Bengalis got a place. Many people from both East Pakistan and West Pakistan came here after leaving their houses, properties and from India, Muslims went there,' he added in the X post.