logo
Delhi HC seeks clarity from private schools on pay arrears to teachers

Delhi HC seeks clarity from private schools on pay arrears to teachers

India Gazette15-07-2025
New Delhi [India], July 15 (ANI): The Delhi High Court has directed numerous private schools across the national capital to file affidavits detailing the implementation status of the Sixth and Seventh Central Pay Commission (CPC) recommendations for their teaching and non-teaching staff.
A Division Bench comprising Justice Navin Chawla and Justice Renu Bhatnagar issued the directive while hearing a batch of appeals filed by teachers from various private institutions, including DAV Public School, GD Goenka Public School, ASN Sr. Secondary School, St. Margaret Senior Secondary School, and others.
The appeals challenge a Single Judge's earlier ruling that, while recognising the teachers' entitlement to revised CPC-scale salaries, had also appointed a committee to examine whether the schools had adequate funds to disburse such salaries, and to assess the eligibility and appointments of the staff.
Counsel appearing for the teachers argued that the appointment of such a committee went beyond the scope of the original writ petitions. The teachers had moved court primarily seeking enforcement of salary payments under the Sixth and Seventh CPCs, not a review of their service credentials or school finances.
On the other hand, counsels representing the schools submitted that fee hikes have not been permitted by regulatory authorities, leaving them without sufficient funds to fully implement the CPC scales. Some schools claimed to have already adopted the revised pay commissions from various dates and had even cleared partial arrears.
To resolve the factual disputes, the Court has now directed each school involved in the appeals to file a single affidavit (not one per case) within four weeks, clearly stating whether they have implemented the Seventh CPC, the date of such implementation (if done), the extent of salary arrears already paid under both the Sixth and Seventh CPC and the amount still pending, if any.
The schools are to share copies of their affidavits with the teachers' legal teams. Teachers, in turn, may file responses within two weeks thereafter.
The matter is next listed for hearing on September 17, 2025. (ANI)
Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

40 years on, implementation of Assam Accord remains incomplete, claim student leaders, oppn parties
40 years on, implementation of Assam Accord remains incomplete, claim student leaders, oppn parties

Time of India

timean hour ago

  • Time of India

40 years on, implementation of Assam Accord remains incomplete, claim student leaders, oppn parties

Guwahati, Four decades after the historic Assam Accord was signed to end a six-year-long violent anti-foreigner agitation, its central objective of making the state free of illegal immigrants remains unfulfilled, student leaders and political parties claimed. The issue of illegal immigration is one of the most contentious topics in Assam's political and social spheres. Several elections have been fought over this single issue of Bangladeshi infiltrators, who were initially marked as D-voters if their names were found in the electoral rolls. The Assam Accord was signed on August 15, 1985 after a violent anti-foreigner movement, which claimed the lives of thousands. Among other clauses, the pact stated that names of all foreigners coming to Assam on or after March 25, 1971, would be detected and deleted from electoral rolls with steps taken to deport them. The All Assam Students' Union (AASU), All Assam Gana Sangram Parishad (AAGSP) and the central government were the three signatories of the accord. "Successive governments at the Centre and state have failed to implement the pact for 40 years. Illegal foreigners were not detected, deported and their names not deleted from the voter lists," AASU president Utpal Sarma and general secretary Samiran Phukan said in a joint statement. Even the paths through which infiltration took place have not been sealed, and it is an "unpardonable sin" committed by the governments, they added. Unchecked infiltration from Bangladesh threatens the very identity, language, culture and identity of Assamese people, the duo said. They also reiterated demands for the implementation of the Justice (Retd.) Biplab Kumar Sharma Committee's report on Clause 6 of the Accord, which promises constitutional, legislative, and administrative safeguards to protect the Assamese people's identity. The AASU also demanded implementation of the National Register of Citizens (NRC) after due corrections and exclusion of Assam from the Citizenship (Amendment) Act. The Citizenship (Amendment) Act, 2019 (CAA) seeks to provide Indian citizenship to Hindus, Jains, Christians, Sikhs, Buddhists and Parsis entering India on or before December 31, 2014 from Bangladesh, Pakistan and Afghanistan after five years of residence here. On the implementation of the accord, Minister Atul Bora in a post on X said the state government was doing everything possible to implement it. "We have taken some historic steps to implement the 52 recommendations of Justice (Retd) Biplab Kumar Sharma Committee. In this way, the process is on to execute all clauses of the Accord," he claimed. Leader of the opposition in Assam assembly Debabrata Saikia said the Congress, which was in power in both the Centre and the state during signing of the accord, wholeheartedly wants implementation of all clauses. "The BJP government does not want implementation of the accord, especially as they are strongly against Clause 6. That is why they have introduced CAA, which in a way nullifies the pact," he added. The Assam Jatiya Parishad (AJP), which was formed as an aftereffect of the anti-CAA movement of 2019-20 comprising mostly ex-AASU members, too slammed the BJP for not doing enough to implement the pact. "The BJP had promised to fully implement the accord before the 2014 Lok Sabha elections. However, nothing has been done. Instead, they enacted the CAA and welcomed illegal Bangladeshis coming after 1971," AJP president Lurinjyoti Gogoi claimed. The Supreme Court on October 17 last year had upheld the constitutional validity of Section 6A of the Citizenship Act which grants Indian citizenship to immigrants who came to Assam between January 1, 1966 and March 25, 1971. Section 6A was inserted into the Citizenship Act in 1985 as a special provision to deal with the citizenship of people covered under the Assam Accord. A five-judge Constitution Bench, headed by then Chief Justice D Y Chandrachud, had said the Assam Accord was a political solution to the problem of illegal migration. It had held that the cut-off date of March 25, 1971, for entry into Assam and granting citizenship is correct. As an outcome of the Assam Accord, the concept of 'D' voters was introduced in the state in 1997 by the EC and prepared a list by including those people who allegedly could not provide evidence in favour of their Indian nationality. It does not exist anywhere in India. Deletion or regularisation of a D-voter is done as per orders of the Foreigners Tribunals (FTs) and the subsequent judgements by higher courts. If the legal system declares one as a foreigner, then his or her name is deleted from the electoral rolls. If a D-voter is termed an Indian citizen by the judiciary, then the prefix 'D' is removed from his or her name. In July last year, the Assam government had asked its Border Police wing not to forward the cases of non-Muslim illegal immigrants entering the state before 2015 to FTs and instead advise them to apply for citizenship through CAA. Last month, the Assam government instructed all districts to drop ongoing cases of suspected non-Muslim illegal foreigners entering the state before 2015 from the FTs following implementation of the Citizenship Amendment Act .

False claims by NGOs ignore Hamass role in aid diversion, Israel says
False claims by NGOs ignore Hamass role in aid diversion, Israel says

News18

timean hour ago

  • News18

False claims by NGOs ignore Hamass role in aid diversion, Israel says

Tel Aviv [Israel], August 14 (ANI/TPS): Israel rejected accusations from more than 100 international aid organisations that it is blocking humanitarian assistance to Gaza, insisting it facilitates deliveries while Hamas seeks to exploit them. The allegations, made in a joint statement Thursday, claim many groups have been unable to deliver aid since March, when Israel introduced a new registration system requiring security vetting for Palestinian Coordinator of Government Activities in the Territories (COGAT), the Israeli body overseeing the transfer of goods into Gaza, called the claims 'false," insisting that Israel facilitates aid entry while Hamas exploits the situation 'to build military strength and tighten its control over the population." COGAT alleged that Hamas operates 'under the cover of certain international aid organisations, whether knowingly or unknowingly."COGAT said the new mechanism was developed in accordance with political directives to ensure humanitarian supplies reach civilians rather than the system, organisations must register and submit the names of their Gaza-based staff for prior security screening. 'It is a transparent, clear process that was presented to all organisations in advance," COGAT said, adding that the requirements are based on 'clear professional and security criteria" meant to safeguard humanitarian operations from terrorist to COGAT, nearly 20 international organisations have complied with the new procedures and are delivering aid to Gaza 'regularly and in full cooperation with Israel." The agency said that about 300 truckloads of humanitarian goods enter Gaza daily through registered refusal of some organisations to share the required staff lists, COGAT argued, 'raises serious concerns about their intentions and the possibility of links between the organisation or its employees and Hamas." The agency insisted that any delays in aid delivery occur 'only when organizations choose not to meet the security requirements intended to prevent Hamas involvement."COGAT dismissed the assertion that Israel is obstructing aid as 'entirely the opposite of reality," and called on all humanitarian groups 'to act transparently, complete the registration, and ensure the aid reaches residents, not Hamas."A special report by The Press Service of Israel in July found that, according to the UN's own numbers, a staggering 85% of the aid entering the Gaza Strip by truck since May 19 has been stolen. The investigation found that a combination of black market profiteers and inflation has made much of the aid in Gaza markets unaffordable for most an academic study released by the Hebrew University of Jerusalem on Tuesday found that humanitarian aid intended to alleviate suffering in war zones often ends up prolonging the very conflicts it seeks to examination of prolonged conflicts in Somalia, Afghanistan, Syria, Iraq, Yemen, Sudan, Ethiopia, and Gaza by Hebrew University law professor Netta Barak-Corren and Dr. Jonathan Boxman concluded that aid diversion is not a rare mishap but a systemic feature of the current humanitarian study drew on United Nations reports, NGO records, and investigative accounts, documenting how humanitarian agencies often strike informal agreements with local power brokers or armed factions to maintain access. These deals, the authors argue, sometimes contradict the core humanitarian principles of neutrality, impartiality, and independence, but are tolerated to keep aid flowing and operations 1,200 people were killed, and 252 Israelis and foreigners were taken hostage in Hamas's attacks on Israeli communities near the Gaza border on October 7. Of the 50 remaining hostages, around 30 are believed to be dead. (ANI/TPS)

SC orders EC to publish names and reasons for deletion of 65 lakh voters in Bihar's SIR by Aug 19, with booth-wise online access and publicity across multiple platforms
SC orders EC to publish names and reasons for deletion of 65 lakh voters in Bihar's SIR by Aug 19, with booth-wise online access and publicity across multiple platforms

Business Standard

timean hour ago

  • Business Standard

SC orders EC to publish names and reasons for deletion of 65 lakh voters in Bihar's SIR by Aug 19, with booth-wise online access and publicity across multiple platforms

The Supreme Court on Thursday directed the Election Commission of India (ECI) to publish on its website before August 19 the names of those who have been excluded from the draft electoral roll after the special intensive revision (SIR) exercise in Bihar. The reasons for the omission of approximately 6.5 million voters must be given, and their names should be searchable online based on EPIC (Electors Photo Identity Card) numbers, the top court said. Soft copies of the deleted voters list must be available on the respective district electoral officer websites, the court added. "The list of 6.5 million voters, whose names appeared in the 2025 list but are not included in the draft list, shall be displayed on the websites of district electoral officers. The information would be booth-wise but it can be accessed by referring to EPIC number. The lists shall be published on the website of the Chief Electoral Officer, Bihar," the court directed. The apex court also told the ECI to accept Aadhaar card as a document for establishing identity. "Your list of 11 documents seems citizen-friendly, but Aadhaar and EPIC are readily available... your notice can say that those who have not submitted so far, can submit their Aadhaar and EPIC also," said Justice Joymalya Bagchi of the top court Bench that is hearing the matter. The Bench of Justice Surya Kant and Justice Bagchi is hearing a clutch of petitions challenging the ECI's June 24 directive, ordering SIR of Bihar electoral roll. The directive requires voters not listed in the 2003 electoral roll to submit documents proving their citizenship. Those born after December 2004 must also furnish citizenship documents of both parents, with additional requirements if a parent is a foreign national. Apart from the directions above, the bench also ordered the ECI to publicise the deleted voters list through newspapers, electronic media, and social media. Printed booth-wise lists of deleted voters along with reasons for their deletion must also be displayed at panchayat and block development offices, the court directed. 'For a migrant worker who has been deleted as dead, even if he is illiterate, his neighbours or friends would alert him… it is only fair to have a procedure that does not block a person from exercising his right to adult franchise. There are civil consequences involved here,' Justice Kant told Senior Advocate Rakesh Dwivedi, who is appearing for the ECI. The apex court said that voters have a right to know, and a high degree of transparency is required to inspire their confidence. 'People have a right to know. A high degree of transparency is required to inspire voters' confidence. Put up the names of excluded electors with reasons out there in the public domain for all to see,' Justice Bagchi told the ECI. The top court had earlier said that if there was 'mass exclusion' of voters in the SIR exercise in Bihar, it will 'step in'. The Association for Democratic Reforms (ADR), People's Union for Civil Liberties (PUCL), activist Yogendra Yadav, Lok Sabha Member of Parliament (MP) from Trinamool Congress Mahua Moitra, Rashtriya Janata Dal (RJD) MP Manoj Jha, Congress leader K C Venugopal, and former member of Bihar Assembly Mujahid Alam are the petitioners in the case.

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into a world of global content with local flavor? Download Daily8 app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store