Bengaluru: When the hijab controversy changed with violence in Karnataka on Tuesday, the state government stated a three-day vacation for secondary schools and colleges throughout the state.
They will be reopened on February 12.
“All governments, assisted, without assistance, degrees, diplomas and college techniques will be closed for three days.
However, the scheduled examination between 9 and 11 February will be held on schedule,” said the government’s command.
Anticipating problems, many educational institutions, especially in Bengaluru, decided to turn off all classes.
Shashi Kumar, Secretary General, Primary and Secondary School Management Association of Karnataka, said the online class will be held in schools and colleges during this period.
The row that rages over women’s rights to wear headscarves in the classroom spread from the beach belt until most of the carnataka.
In violent protests, several students, teachers and police were injured even when the case appeared to hear in the High Court.
Forbidden orders were clamped in the city of Shivamoggga until Wednesday following clashes between two groups of students from the Shivamogga Government College who left a dozen injured students.
Some of them attacked private buses with stones.
Some students wearing a turmeric scarf raise the turmeric flag on campus.
The police fired tear shells and carried out Baton’s fees to extinguish the horde at the One Class College campus.
The district administration clamps the command of the occupants in Davanagere and Harihar.
Some police and students are injured.
Tension applies at Mahatma Gandhi Memorial (MGM) College, Udupi, after Hindu students arrive wearing turmeric and shawl turbans to fight students wearing headscarves.
Some students tried to enter RD Patil PU College in Sindagi in the Vijayapura district by wearing scarves and headscarves, but the Principal of Sannalli denied them in.
When they refused to comply with instructions, the police spread the students.