Bengaluru: The Karnataka High Court has directed the state government to not make Kannada mandatory language for student degrees up to further orders.
“The State Government at this stage cannot insist on making Kannada mandatory.
Students who have chosen to learn the language can do it,” the division bench led by the Chairman of the Ritu Judge Raj Awasthi ordered on Thursday.
Safe! You have succeeded in throwing your votelogin to see participants, the bench also observes that, in connection with making kannada language subjects mandatory for higher studies in the background of the application of National Education Policy (NEP), a consideration is needed.
The High Court heard pills submitted by Samskara Bharathi (Karnataka) Trust, three institutions that promote Sanskrit and five students about this problem.
Advocate General Prabhuling Navadgi brings to court notice that five students who have submitted pills in this case have studied Kannada to class 12 and they cannot obey while studying at a higher level.
Advice for students, Sridhar Prabhu, argues that the court has asked the government not to accelerate the problem of making kannada mandatory language for graduation courses.
He also looked for directions from the court because students had taken acceptance of this academic year.
Additional lawyer General M.B.
Nargund told the court that he was not in a position to explain the attitude of the central government to make Kannada mandatory for higher studies as part of the NEP implementation.
He looked for four weeks to apply for a detailed counter by the center in this matter.