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West Bengal: Question To Mark 'Azad Kashmir' In Map Stirs Controversy; Education Board To Rectify Mistake

West Bengal Board of Secondary Education President Ramanuj Ganguly, when contacted, conceded that the 'goof up' has taken place in the test papers published by the autonomous body, and action is being taken against those responsible for the mistake.

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A political row erupted in West Bengal after an image of a Class 10 model question paper, asking students to mark "Azad Kashmir" in a map, went viral on social media, with the opposition BJP claiming it to be a "jihadi conspiracy" and the TMC terming it a mistake that it doesn't support.

In the question paper, issued in an exercise book of a Bengali-medium school for Madhyamik aspirants, the paper setter has asked them to identify several places on the map – Pakistan-occupied Kashmir (referred to as 'Azad Kashmir' in Pakistan), the place where Gandhiji had first undertaken the Satyagraha movement, and the Chittagong battleground.

The issue snowballed into a major political row, with the BJP quickly blaming the state government for promoting "jihadi thoughts" in the state, and the ruling TMC dubbing the allegations baseless.

How did the education board respond?

West Bengal Board of Secondary Education President Ramanuj Ganguly, when contacted, conceded that the "goof up" has taken place in the test papers published by the autonomous body, and action is being taken against those responsible for the mistake.

"We published a compilation of question papers provided by various schools. In one such question paper, this mistake was identified. A probe is being conducted, and stern action will be initiated against editorial team members who were entrusted with the task of proof-reading the papers," Ganguly told PTI.

He said the process to issue a corrigendum on the board's website is underway.

"Those involved in the mistake will not be spared," he said.

Union minister of state for education Subhas Sarkar, during a press meet earlier in the day, called for a state-level inquiry into the matter.

Sarkar told  reporters that the central government will also look into the issue.

"I urge the state education minister to conduct an inquiry. If the allegations are genuine, appropriate action should be taken against the publisher and the person who has set the paper. The test paper should be immediately withdrawn and the question deleted," he said.

Sarkar went on to say that the incident, if found to be true, can be attributed to the "appeasement politics of the TMC-run government, which has emboldened some people to insert a question with anti-national overtones in the test paper".

"A high-level probe must be ordered. This incident proves that the state government promotes jihadi thoughts to appease its vote bank," senior BJP leader Rahul Sinha said.

The BJP-TMC war of words

Echoing him, BJP national vice-president Dilip Ghosh said the TMC government not just "supports jihadi elements but also tries to influence the minds of the schoolchildren".

TMC state spokesperson Kunal Ghosh told PTI his party doesn't support anything that is wrong.

"If someone has set such a question, he has done wrong. We don't support such acts.

"The TMC is a secular party which does not believe in appeasing any particular community. Sarkar has made a baseless comment against our party," Ghosh stated.

(With PTI Inputs)