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Punjab protests repatriation of teachers from UT schools

The Punjab government on Monday reacted against the sudden repatriation of its teachers who are on deputation in Chandigarh, saying it violated the employee-ratio norm.

Updated on: Jul 20, 2015 09:30 PM IST
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The Punjab government on Monday reacted against the sudden repatriation of its teachers who are on deputation in Chandigarh, saying it violated the employee-ratio norm.

Education-minister-Dr-Daljit-Singh-Cheema
Education-minister-Dr-Daljit-Singh-Cheema

In a protest letter to the UT administration, Punjab education minister Dr Daljit Singh Cheema demanded the withdrawal of the orders, reminding the UT administrator and Punjab governor of his assurance against the move during a meeting over the issue. "The repatriation order has shocked people, since deputation to Chandigarh is guided by the Punjab Reorganisation Act, which mandates maintaining 60:40 ratio of Punjab and Haryana employees in the joint capital," he wrote.

The minister argued that the UT schools were short of 139 teachers from Punjab already. In the 20% total quota of teachers on deputation, Punjab's rightful share is 12%. "The position of teachers deputed in the UT is different, as they get no deputation allowance and, moreover, have the right to serve in the state capital," Dr Cheema further wrote, adding: "The UT administration has chosen deliberately to ignore the assurance that governor Kaptan Singh Solanki had given me after hearing a delegation led by Rajya Sabha member Sukhdev Singh Dhindsa, after which he had stalled the repatriation move, terming it illogical."

Dr Cheema said the UT was discouraging the employees from coming to the capital for short deputation. "It didn't consult the Punjab government before. It is travesty of justice to both partner states that under the new UT policy, Chandigarh has kept 80% of the posts for its pool and left only 20% to the two states," he wrote, claiming that a further reduction was "rubbing salt into the wounds of Punjab".

 
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