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Kerala: Black flags shown to CM Vijayan over fee hike in private medical colleges

Youth Congress and Kerala Students' Union showed black flags to Chief Minister and Health Minister over the issue of high fees and corruption in private medical colleges.

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Chief Minister Pinarayi Vijayan
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Activists of Youth Congress and Kerala Students Union, the youth and students' outfits of the Congress party, on Saturday showed black flags to Chief Minister Pinarayi Vijayan near the state Secretariat in Thiruvana as part of their agitation over the issue of fees and admission in private medical colleges.

Police said some protesters showed black flags to the chief minister's vehicle near the Cantonment Gate of Secretariat, the administrative hub, at the heart of the city. The protesters were immediately taken away by the police.

Tension prevailed in front of the Secretariat after some protesters blocked the movement of Forest Minister K Raju's vehicle in the morning as part of the hunger strike of Youth Congress state president Dean Kuriakose, along with another activist Mahesh, which entered the fifth day.

Police chased the protesters with lathis and even used water cannons to disperse them. Reacting to the incident, Raju later said it was "quite unexpected" and should not have happened. He also claimed that the protesters banged on his car and waved black flags.

In a similar incident in the northern district of Kannur, a group of Youth Congress activists showed black flags to state Health Minister KK Shylaja, police said. Meanwhile, two Congress MLAs -- K Sabarinathan and M Vincent -- staged a dharna in front of a police station demanding immediate release of party workers, taken into custody in connection with the incidents.

Former chief minister Oommen Chandy and opposition leader Ramesh Chennithala condemned the alleged police action against the Congress activists.

Chandy demanded a probe into the incident while Chennithala alleged that the police acted against the protesters "without any provocation".

The Youth Congress was demanding scrapping of the agreement between the state government and the management of private self-financing medical colleges, maintaining that the new fees structure was "very high" and alleging corruption.
 

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