DCPCR receives over 9,000 RTE complaints



New Delhi: Over 9,100 Delhi students have approached the capital's child rights body with complaints over denial of admission and other matters under Right to Education Act since the legislation came into being in April.

The Delhi Commission for Protection of Child Rights (DCPCR) had already dealt with around 1,000 complaints but 8,000 cases are still pending before its special RTE cell, its Chairperson Amodh Kant told reporters here today.

"We have been increasingly receiving cases of schools flouting the rules. Screening tests are still being conducted, poor children are denied admission, schools have hiked fees. We are handling 8,000 such cases at present," he said.

The majority of the cases were of allegations of admission denials, he said.

Right to Education Act came into effect on April one this year with the view to provide elementary education to the children belonging to the age group of 6-14 years.

"Majority of the schools are reluctant in admitting students, but we have to force them. Government schools give overcrowding as the primary reason for denying admission to students," Kanth said.

Holding the government responsible for not spending on education infrastructure, he added, "If they can spend so much on Commonwealth Games, why can't they spend on infrastructure? We can not wait for three years, we are in touch with NGOs for assistance in the project."

To effectively implement the Act and to reach out to more children, the commission established the first of its kind RTE cell and a helpline number, a project named 'Alert and Action Mechanism', after the RTE was passed.

The RTE Act empowers DCPCR to function as a statutory monitoring body and an appellate authority to ensure that children's rights are not violated.

PTI