A private publication house owned by Dolindra Prasad Sharma
, managing director of the state owned Sajha Publication, has been
found illegally publishing textbooks for grades six and seven.
A monitoring team from the Department of Education (DoE), raided the
Oxford Publication House at Anamnagar on Tuesday and seized hundreds of
units of textbooks that were unlawfully printed. It was the second
instance in a week where a private publisher was caught printing
textbooks meant for public schools without the approval from concerned
authority. On March 11, the DoE had raided the Chhauni-based Mission
Publication Pvt Ltd and recovered thousands of units of illegally
printed textbooks for the same grades.
The government has allowed only 21 private publishers to pring 18
million units of textbooks from grade one up to grade five while Janak
Sikshya Samagri Kendra (JSSK) has the sole right to print the textbooks
for grade six and above.
The Central Level Textbooks Monitoring Committee, led by Dilli Rimal,
has recommended the Curriculum Development Centre (CDC) to initiate
action against Oxford Publications House as well as Mission Publications
Pvt Ltd.
CDC Director Diwakar Dhungel, who is also the chairman of Sajha, vowed
to book the two companies based on the existing legal provision.
The two publication houses could be blacklisted if they fail to furnish
credible explanation, Dhungel said. Once the two companies have been
blacklisted, he added, their cases would be forwarded to the District
Administration Office.
After the publishing house owned by the managing director of Sajha
himself was caught printing the school level textbooks illegally,
Education Minister Chitra Lekha Yadav has come under fire for choice of
nominee.
Minister Yadav had appointed Sharma the managing director of Sajha
three months ago, despite protest from the employees of the government
owned publication.
Meanwhile, Sharma has claimed that the textbooks found by the monitoring team from his publication were stock from last year.
"Oxford has not published any new textbooks. I had already written to
the DoE, explaining that we have over 5,000 textbooks in the stock. I
will explain all these things with proof when I submit the
clarification," he said
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