I am ready to have dialogue with IIT faculty: Kapil Sibal

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September 24th, 2009
PTI

As the IIT professors resorted to the unprecedented step of day-long hunger strike on Thursday over pay issue, HRD minister Kapil Sibal said he is open to have any kind of dialogue with them to discuss their demands but ruled out world class salaries due to lack of resources.

"We will be too happy to discuss anything..... I am ready to give them any autonomy they want," said Sibal when asked to comment on the strike undertaken by around 1500 teachers of the premier educational institutes.

He contended that he believed in dialogue but made it clear that he was upset by the "ultimatum" of October 1 set by the protesting faculty to address their grievances.

Sibal said the government would not interfere in the affairs of IITs but that too much of luxury in terms of salaries would not be allowed.

India has to work under "some constraints" and it cannot afford the same kind of freedom or salaries which other developed countries like the US can afford, the minister said.

"America is a four Trillion Dollar economy with 280 million people. It can afford to have the kind of quality private universities it has and give kind of freedom, money, salary that is given there.

"But if you look at my budget, it is insufficient to meet the needs of a knowledge society....We must understand each other, the constraints of the government.....We need to get together to work the system out," he said.

 

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We are a very poor country Agreed. But where do we get money to fund a better if not best security system for the netas and their families? And we are not worried about a significant wastage of money in good-for-nothing schemes under the names of the first family of his party. India owes her status to the knowledge that was built and nurtured in the previous generation till 1980s. The ill effects of the degeneration of values will show in the next two decades and more. Already we are seeing the consequences in the form of a majority of unemployable graduates and unfilled seats in the much loved reserved seats.

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