Sunday, January 25, 2015

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Twenty-two children [en, as the following links, unless otherwise indicated] between four and twelve years old, who attended a public school in the Indian state of Bihar [it], died on July 16, after eating contaminated food.
Apparently, the episode is the culmination of a series of contamination of school meals; on the occasion of another incident that occurred in the district of Madhubani, Bihar always, fifteen students have fallen ill after having lunch at the school canteen. bahan ko pataya In other circumstances, in Dhule, in the district of Maharashtra, thirty-one children have suffered the same fate, ending up in the hospital.
The mid-day meal scheme, started in the sixties, is one of the oldest programs in India, and aims to motivate parents of the lower classes to send their children to school. To do this, in addition to school education, each student is provided daily lunch. However, since the beginning of the program, there are reports of massive embezzlement of food reserved for children; a television service in 2006 revealed that students bahan ko pataya of a primary school in Darjeeling were not receiving lunch from a year and a half.
Predictably, the issue has been exploited at the political level: the ruling party accused the opposition of having masterminded a plot, since the husband of the director of the school bahan ko pataya seems to be a politician prominent in charge bahan ko pataya of providing for food supplies for students.
As soon as journalists have reached the hospital where the children were admitted to report their conditions, poor management of the situation was evident. The shots show the surviving bahan ko pataya children next to each other, lying on a table and with a drip of saline.
Students from a school in Hindi, on the outskirts of Mumbai, eat sitting on the ground with no chairs nor dishes; another student shows a container and complains about the quality of food. 2011. Photo by author.
thekiranbedi: In some places the lunch served is lousy, and is cooked in poor hygienic conditions; even teachers lose time to cook! Why not give children fruit and nuts?
As evidence of the statements of Bedi appears the image published above. Not only in Bihar but across India, government schools may have more serious stories of neglect and mismanagement to tell. Regarding this case, the Indian government has announced that readily give a compensation of 2 lakhs (about 2500 euro) to the families of victims.
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