This Article is From Dec 16, 2015

Supreme Court To Hear Plea On Abolition Of Quota In Delhi's Sanskriti School Today

Supreme Court To Hear Plea On Abolition Of Quota In Delhi's Sanskriti School Today
New Delhi: The Supreme Court on Tuesday agreed to hear a plea of the Centre challenging the Delhi High Court's decision of setting aside the 60 per cent quota in the prestigious Sanskriti School in Delhi for wards of Group-A government officials.

"Let it come tomorrow," a bench comprising Chief Justice TS Thakur and justices AK Sikri and R Banumathi said when Attorney General Mukul Rohatgi sought urgent listing of the petition against the order of the High Court.

While setting aside the 60 per cent quota in Sanskriti School the High Court in its November 6 judgement had said that it was "akin to the erstwhile segregation of white and black students in the US and violated constitutional provisions of equality and right to education".

60 per cent seats in the school are reserved for children of Group-A officers, 25 per cent for those from the economically weaker sections, 10 per cent for wards of rest of the society and 5 per cent for the staff of the school.

The court in its judgement had also observed that various expert commissions have said that the current school system in India and abroad promotes and maintains a wide chasm between the advantaged and disadvantaged.

The High Court had taken suo motu cognizance of the issue in 2006 after reports that the school was charging "nearly 40 per cent less fee from the children of Group-A officers of the Union Government vis-a-vis other children".

 
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