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Kids left attending classes in worn out school buildings

Non-allocation of funds for the repair of a school building, badly damaged in 2013 flash- floods, has forced its authorities to hold classes in another less dilapidated school in Uttarkashi district.

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Non-allocation of funds for the repair of a school building, badly damaged in 2013 flash- floods, has forced its authorities to hold classes in another less dilapidated school in Uttarkashi district.

Nearly 500 school buildings are in dilapidated condition across the state.

"We had to ask students studying at our primary school recently to attend their classes in the neighbouring Junior High School whose authorities were kind enough to spare some of their rooms for our students whose own classes at the primary school were inundated by rainwater as is the case every year during the rainy season," said Yashwant Singh Chouhan, the Principal of the primary school Beshti in Purola area of the district.

"Rain or no rain the school building which was badly damaged in the flashfloods of 2013 even otherwise is not in a usable condition with its ramshackle ceilings and walls threatening to collapse any moment", he said.

When contacted Assistant block education officer, Purola, Dwarka Prasad Pandey, said the primary school at Beshti was "just one example."

"This is the condition of nearly 1.5 dozen schools in the block since the 2013 Uttarakhand disaster which caused extensive damage to concrete structures in the area," he said.

An estimate of expenses to be incurred over the repair of these school buildings has been sent to the district education officer for sanction but the funds were yet to arrive, Pandey said.

"Once the fund is received work on these buildings will be taken up on a priority," he said.

Chairman of the State Commission for Protection of Child Rights, Yogendra Khanduri, said little has been done to improve the situation.

Khanduri had written to Chief Secretary S Ramaswamy in May this year asking him to do something immediately about the repair of nearly 500 dilapidated school buildings across the state.

"Some patch work here and there may have been done ever since I wrote to the government but 80 per cent of such buildings numbering around 500 continue to be in the same pathetic condition risking the lives of children," Khanduri told

 

(This article has not been edited by DNA's editorial team and is auto-generated from an agency feed.)

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