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'This is India, I'll speak Hindi': SBI staff sparks Hindi-Kannada row
An SBI official refusing to speak Kannada in Bengaluru triggered public outrage, an official apology, CM Siddaramaiah's condemnation, and a renewed Kannada pride debate
New Delhi
A video showing a heated exchange between a State Bank of India (SBI) branch manager and a customer in Bengaluru's Surya Nagar has gone viral, fuelling Karnataka's ongoing language debate. In the clip, the customer repeatedly requests the official to speak in Kannada, to which she responds that she will not use the local language and insists on speaking in Hindi.
'I will not speak Kannada in Karnataka. Never. Speak in Hindi,' the official is heard saying.
When the customer reminds her, 'This is Karnataka, ma'am,' she replies, 'This is India,' adding that her mother tongue is Hindi. The clip, posted on X, drew swift reactions, with users tagging senior officials, the Reserve Bank of India, and Union Finance Minister Nirmala Sitharaman, demanding action.
Apology issued after public outcry
Amid mounting criticism and calls for action, the SBI official appeared in another video, offering an apology. With help from colleagues, she addressed the issue in Kannada:
'If I have hurt anyone, I sincerely apologise. I will try to cooperate and conduct my business in Kannada going forward.'
The arrogant SBI manager who was saying She will never speak Kannada now apologised. But look at her how she is giggling. @TheOfficialSBI she thinks this issue is a Joke. pic.twitter.com/RwaUSxFBEZ
— ????Che_Krishna????????????❤️ (@CheKrishnaCk_) May 21, 2025
Chief Minister Siddaramaiah condemns incident
The matter caught the attention of Karnataka Chief Minister Siddaramaiah, who condemned the behaviour and welcomed the bank's swift intervention.
'The behaviour of the SBI Branch Manager in Surya Nagara, Anekal Taluk, refusing to speak in Kannada and English and showing disregard to citizens, is strongly condemnable,' he wrote on X.
He added: 'We appreciate SBI's swift action in transferring the official.'
Siddaramaiah also emphasised the need to respect regional languages and urged for sensitisation training for banking staff nationwide.
The behaviour of the SBI Branch Manager in Surya Nagara, Anekal Taluk refusing to speak in Kannada & English and showing disregard to citizens, is strongly condemnable. We appreciate SBI's swift action in transferring the official. The matter may now be treated as closed.…
— Siddaramaiah (@siddaramaiah) May 21, 2025
SBI responds to viral video
The State Bank of India issued a statement expressing concern and confirming that the matter is under thorough evaluation.
'We are deeply concerned about the recent incident at our Surya Nagar Branch of AO South Bengaluru. The matter is currently under thorough evaluation,' SBI said on X.
'State Bank of India maintains a policy of zero tolerance towards any behaviour that adversely affects the sentiments of our customers. We remain steadfast in our commitment to ensuring respectful and dignified conduct towards all citizens.'
Kannada language debate reignited
The incident has reignited Karnataka's long-running debate on language, especially concerning the use of Kannada in public-facing roles. The row follows an earlier viral post urging 'outsiders in Bengaluru' to learn Kannada, which triggered widespread discourse online.
Social media reactions remained divided. While many insisted that individuals working in Karnataka should respect and use Kannada, others argued that enforcing language preferences in a multilingual nation was impractical.
The debate quickly spilled over into broader North vs South India discussions online, with strong opinions voiced over language, identity, and inclusivity.
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Indian Express
23 minutes ago
- Indian Express
Post-stampede, Delhi heat awaits Siddaramaiah and Shivakumar on Capital visit
In the aftermath of the June 3 stampede at Bengaluru's M Chinnaswamy Stadium, where 11 people died during a crowd surge to join celebrations of the first ever IPL championship victory for the Royal Challengers Bengaluru cricket team, the political context of a visit to New Delhi on Tuesday by Chief Minister Siddaramaiah has changed. The Karnataka CM and his deputy D K Shivakumar were scheduled to visit Delhi this month to sort out several issues with the Congress top brass, including nomination of four members to the Legislative Council for the party to establish a majority in the House, possible Cabinet changes, the outcome of a caste survey, and a calendar for local polls. Above all is the simmering rivalry between Siddaramaiah and Shivakumar, with the latter – who is also the state Congress chief – pushing the leadership to hand him the reins of the state following the completion of two years of governance by Siddaramaiah on May 20. However, the June 3 stampede tragedy, for which the BJP and JD(S) have held both the Congress leaders responsible, has put Siddaramaiah and Shivakumar in a weaker position in any bargain with the Congress high command. The CM and Deputy CM are expected to meet senior Congress leader Rahul Gandhi, AICC president Mallikarjun Kharge and party general secretaries. 'The high command may ask about this incident (stampede). The high command has a responsibility to ensure that this does not happen in the future,' Karnataka Public Works Minister Satish Jarkiholi said Monday on Siddaramaiah and Shivakumar's Delhi visit. One of the primary reasons the two are on the defensive is the fact that both were virtually vying with each other for limelight following the IPL final victory of the RCB, a privately owned team. Siddaramaiah, a cricket enthusiast, cleared a felicitation for the players a day after the title win on the premises of the Vidhana Soudha, and made a call on social media for the people to participate. Shivakumar, in turn, was at the forefront of the RCB cavalcade from the airport and also attended a felicitation at the Chinnaswamy Stadium where the stampede occurred. He was in his home town Kanakapura and rushed to Bengaluru to be present at the June 4 felicitation events. The Opposition has alleged that the stampede deaths were a result of the broken systems in the state government due to such jostling for power and authority between Siddaramaiah and Shivakumar. 'It pains me to say this, but we have a CM who is inactive. He has no control over the Deputy CM. As for the Home Minister (G Parameshwara)… he only obeys commands,' Union minister and JD(S) leader H D Kumaraswamy said after the stampede. Siddaramaiah's decision to sack his political secretary K Govindaraju was seen as a damage control exercise. A sports administrator, Govindaraju is reported to have played a key role in the decision to host two felicitations for the RCB team on June 4. With the cricket franchise posting social media messages regarding this even before official clearances were granted, thousands poured into the heart of Bengaluru, triggering the stampede. Kumaraswamy said: 'On Tuesday night (June 3), the team won the IPL trophy. What was the rush to organise a felicitation event immediately?… Everyone knows the role the Deputy CM played in all this.' In his defence, an emotional Shivakumar told reporters after the stampede deaths that the fans had descended to the felicitation site as they were 'euphoric' after RCB's first IPL title in 18 years of the league. With Shivakumar also the minister in-charge of Bengaluru, the CM has claimed that senior city police officers had not kept him in the loop about decisions on the RCB event at the cricket stadium, where the stampede occurred. 'They did not inform me. Is it not a serious thing?' Siddaramaiah said this week. The government order suspending five police officers, including Bengaluru Police Commissioner B Dayananda, says Dayananda in particular should have told the organisers in writing that permission could not be granted for the felicitation 'on the grounds of lack of time to prepare for such a huge event'. 'As a result, the situation went out of control and brought a lot of misery, loss of precious life and embarrassment to the government.' Congress minister Satish Jarkiholi admitted that the stampede issue showed 'there has been a failure' and that it had become a 'source of tension for us'. 'Until the issue of who is responsible for the stampede is settled, there will be unease.' However, he added that it did not mean the CM or others had to resign. 'There will be a report in 15 days and then the people will know what happened… There have been incidents in previous governments as well but there have been no resignations,' Jarkiholi said. The stampede came at a time when Shivakumar was pressing for appointment as CM, replacing Siddaramiah, though he was rebuffed on this by two AICC general secretaries recently. He was reportedly opposing any Cabinet expansion by Siddaramaiah as well. In recent days, Shivakumar had tried to mend fences with Karnataka Home Minister and key Dalit leader Parameshwara, another aspirant to the CM's post, after embarrassing him with remarks about an expensive gift given to an actress arrested for gold smuggling. Siddaramaiah, who has denied any deal at the time of Congress government formation of him making way for Shivakumar after two-and-a-half years in power, has said it is up to the party leadership to take a call, but has hinted that he would at the least like to hold power till early next year and become the longest-serving Karnataka CM after Devaraj Urs (who was in the post for seven years and 238 days). Siddaramaiah too has been trying to build bridges, and recently paid a surprise visit to senior AICC leader B K Hariprasad, a former critic who has a good say in party matters in Delhi. The ostensible reason was a discussion on communal tensions in the coastal region of Dakshina Kannada from where Hariprasad hails. But there was soon talk that Hariprasad, who is an OBC community member like Siddaramaiah, was being considered for a post in a Cabinet reshuffle. The Congress needs to manage OBC anger after a recent caste survey put Kurubas, the community to which Siddaramaiah belongs, far ahead of other backward groups in numbers and backwardness, and hence, eligible for enhanced quota benefits. There is also brewing Dalit anger, with activist Bhaskar Prasad travelling around the state accusing the Siddaramaiah government of neglecting the Dalits and of delaying the implementation of internal quotas, as sought by the Madigas. A government-ordered survey of SC communities to provide internal quotas is still in the works. However, the Congress leadership, while reportedly disappointed with the Karnataka government, may not be keen on an overhaul, with Siddaramaiah emerging as a leader with influence across the state, including among Muslims. But the stadium stampede gives it an upper hand in forcing some changes, including greater division of authority between Siddaramaiah, Shivakumar and others. A leader associated with the Congress stressed on the need to resolve the crisis in the party. 'The Congress in Karnataka has gone from being the custodian of social justice to an executor of caste calculations. Instead of bold leadership, we see backroom bargaining. Instead of unity, division. Instead of a vision, confusion.'


Time of India
30 minutes ago
- Time of India
Hindi teacher for English, science taught via YouTube: In these Haryana schools, almost nobody cleared board exams
In these Haryana schools grappling with a severe teacher crunch, the writing was already on the wall when class XII exams came. While their peers did the customary whoop, jump in the air and celebratory group hug — hallmarks of result season — they retreated into anonymity as class 12 board scores were published last month; away from probing questions, the scorn of family members, inquest of neighbours, and commiserations of friends who had done better. Tired of too many ads? go ad free now At 18 schools, all students who took the Haryana class XII board exams this year failed. At 82 more, the pass percentage was below 35, an outcome anomalous with the 85.7 overall, which was an improvement from 85.3 in 2024 and 81.6 in 2023. No forensic investigation is needed to explain their poor showing. In one school, for example, the Hindi teacher was also taking the English class. At another, science lessons came from YouTube channels, supervised by a teacher from the humanities section. Students, principals and parents TOI spoke to also referred to strict measures against cheating that were taken this time as a factor that had 'spooked' some of them. The risk many of the failed students run is dropping out of the education system. Girls resisting pressure from families to get married fear they will no longer be able to do so. And for boys under pressure to add to the family income, it's the inevitable path into low-paying informal jobs. 'In such circumstances, the community questions the value of further schooling, with remarks like, 'will he or she become a lawyer, or DC?'. This leads to parents not re-admitting their children after they fail,' says Kusum Malik, science teacher at a govt school, underlining the need to reach out to students and their families and rebuild confidence through special classes. 23 appeared, 22 failed At Govt Girls Senior Secondary School in Nuh's Shikrawa, only one student from the whole batch had a pass score in all subjects. Tired of too many ads? go ad free now 'A great shame' is how sarpanch Azhar Shikrawa described the feeling, pointing out that 'this village has given our justice system two judges and some police officers'. In principal Amar Singh Beniwal's practical analysis, this was a result foretold. The school is without dedicated teachers for history and political science and has had severe problems in the science stream. Last year, of the six girls who had taken science, three failed and three received a compartment. The school introduced the science stream three years ago, but has been struggling to find teachers. At present, says Beniwal, it has teachers for physics and chemistry, but not biology. And yet, students did relatively better in biology — which was taught by the chemistry teacher — than in chemistry itself, confounding the principal. Isha, who failed in chemistry, blamed it on a 'lack of revision'. Nasreen said English questions 'were out of syllabus' and has made stoic peace with the result, calling it ' kismat ki baat (a matter of fate)'. Farzana referred to a sudden drop in performance after class 11 'as the medium of teaching changed to English from Hindi'. Farzana's father had a different take — he felt the results were affected by 'strict checking and presence of exter0 nal observers during the exams, which had made the children nervous'. Beniwal told TOI , 'Absence of leadership in the past caused teachers to become complacent. The core issue is staff shortage. Our teachers are overburdened and have to teach subjects beyond their expertise. It's true that many students are transitioning from Hindi medium. This year, we also implemented stricter measures to prevent cheating.' 13 appeared, all failed Since Govt Senior Secondary School in Autha, also in Nuh, started its higher secondary section in 2022, very few have cleared the boards. This year, none did. The school hasn't had a specialist English teacher since 2022. It's the Hindi teacher who stands in. Political science has just one teacher for junior and senior classes. There were, however, two Sanskrit teachers till this Feb. Azhar, who didn't clear his boards this year, says there was an all-round crisis of teachers. 'The physical education teacher sometimes came and took science class. The principal, who has been at the school for around a year-and-a-half, taught us history and political science. But the principal also has other things to do,' he said. Apparently, the exams were also marred by confusion. One student said the English paper started 60-90 minutes late in some rooms at the exam centre. Another said there was confusion about allotment of rooms. Shri Krishan, the school's principal, said, 'The primary cause of poor performance is the lack of specialised subject teachers. Our students rely entirely on the school for learning; if they don't receive proper guidance here, they don't study at all.' 105 appeared, 95 failed The All Boys Senior Secondary School in Nuh's Punhana did not have teachers for chemistry, physics and biology, its principal Abdul Nafe told TOI . 'A teacher for chemistry joined in Nov, but the batch had little time left for preparations,' he says, adding that science teachers have not been available for two years. It did not, therefore, come as a surprise that just three students had pass marks in physics. 'Since we didn't have subject teachers, we tried to learn from material on the web. Teachers in the classroom would play YouTube videos for us. We could understand the material to some extent, but it was difficult to clear doubts in this manner,' a student said. Marks in humanities subjects were better, even though geography and home science had no teachers. 'But the overall result was affected by students failing in specific subjects despite passing others (like passing history but failing in Hindi or political science),' says Nafe, adding that many students came to class 11 with very weak foundational knowledge, struggling even with basic reading and writing (the school identified 28 class 9 students who cannot write Hindi or English). 25 appeared, 21 failed K Ramniwas minces no words. 'We are very ashamed of the result,' says the principal of Govt Senior Secondary School in Khanda, Sonepat. The school had no shortage of teachers. 'It's even more shameful that despite having all teachers available in our school, only four students passed,' says Ramniwas, identifying poor attendance as the main culprit. Most of the students in this rural school belong to farming families and economically weak sections, and so have to 'regularly engage in work with their family to earn some extra money', according to the principal. The results are a reality check for the school, which needs a course correction in political science and history, two subjects in which most of the current batch failed. 'The previous years were fine. This time, results were affected by these two subjects,' says Ramniwas. This session, the school will have a bigger batch in class 12 (34 students). 15 appeared, 10 failed Govt Senior Secondary School at Kaurali in Faridabad has not had a full-time principal since Suparna Trikha retired on Aug 31 last year. Neither does it have teachers for social sciences, science, Hindi, English and Sanskrit. It's, therefore, somewhat a matter of surprise that five from the batch of 15 that appeared in the boards this year actually cleared it and will move to college. 'How can students be expected to study when there are no teachers for even the main subjects? The condition of govt schools must be improved. Students are suffering,' says , the sarpanch of Kaurali. An officer at the education directorate in Panchkula, told TOI , 'Out of the 18 schools where all students failed, only three are govt schools. In Nuh, the poor performance of schools is largely due to a shortage of teachers. The situation is expected to improve following a teacher transfer drive, which aims to address this issue.' Kusum Malik says the 'class readiness programme' in the months of April and May needs to be strengthened with a focus on improving basic skills in Hindi, English and maths. 'To address social factors, parent-teacher meetings need to be held regularly. Teachers can explain the benefits of education and use success stories from the community as role models to inspire them,' she says.
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Business Standard
34 minutes ago
- Business Standard
LIVE news updates: Karnataka HC posts next hearing on Bengaluru stampede to June 12
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Karnataka Chief Minister Siddaramaiah and Deputy Chief Minister DK Shivakumar are set to meet the Congress high command in New Delhi on Tuesday to deliberate on various matters, including the 4 June stampede in Bengaluru that claimed 11 lives. The Congress-led state government has faced strong criticism following the incident, with opposition parties BJP and JD(S) holding both the Chief Minister and his deputy accountable, demanding their resignation. According to a statement from the Chief Minister's Office, Siddaramaiah will update party leadership in Delhi on the recent developments. The stampede took place on the evening of 4 June outside Chinnaswamy Stadium, where a massive crowd had gathered to celebrate the Royal Challengers Bangalore (RCB) team's IPL victory. 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