Bengal teachers who lost jobs begin march demanding release of OMR sheets
The SC last week declared the appointment of 25,753 teaching and non-teaching staffers in state-run and state-aided schools as ‘vitiated and tainted’.
PTI

KOLKATA, 11 APRIL
Thousands of
teachers, who lost their jobs following a Supreme Court verdict that
invalidated their appointments, began a march from Karunamoyee in Salt Lake to
the West Bengal School Service Commission (SSC) Bhawan on Friday demanding the
release of their Optical Mark Recognition (OMR) sheets to identify the genuine
candidates.
Carrying placards
demanding reinstatement, the protesters were joined by members of various civil
society organisations in a show of solidarity.
"SSC should release
the copies of the OMR sheets to help segregate the eligible teachers," a
demonstrator said.
They claimed that the
police officer accused of kicking teachers during a previous protest at the DI
office in Kasba has now been assigned to investigate the cases registered
against them.
"What can we
expect from such a probe? In no civilised society does an accused investigate
the victims," a protester remarked.
A large police
contingent, including personnel from the Rapid Action Force, was deployed to
prevent the rally from reaching the SSC Bhawan.
The Supreme Court
last week declared the appointment of 25,753 teaching and non-teaching staffers
in state-run and state-aided schools as "vitiated and tainted".
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