Meghalaya AITC claim protest in Delhi pays off as parliament all set to discuss Garo & Khasi languages
The opposition All India Trinamool Congress (AITC) on Tuesday claimed that its recent protest in Delhi had paid off after the parliament has listed the issue relating to the demand for inclusion of Garo and Khasi languages in the Eighth Schedule for discussion in the zero hour.
“Less than a week after TMC leaders raised state specific issues in the national capital, today the Parliament has listed one of the most crucial topics, that of inclusion of Garo and Khasi languages in the Eighth Schedule for discussion in the zero hour,” the party said in a statement issued here.
On July 26, a delegation of AITC leaders including Dr Mukul Sangma and MLA George Lyngdoh along with MPs held a protest outside the Parliament demanding the repeal of the Assam Meghalaya border pact and the inclusion of Garo and Khasi languages in the Eighth Schedule. “
In his media briefing, Sangma had stated that language is an indispensable part of identity. The Garo and Khasi inclusion would increase job opportunities for the youth of the state.
TMC Rajya Sabha MP Derek O’Brien on July 5 had written to the Secretary General of the Rajya Sabha to discuss the matter pertaining to the languages of Meghalaya.
In his letter he had stated, “The recurring denial of Garo and Khasi languages as official languages of this country, shows the second hand treatment that the Central Government portrays towards North-East in general and Meghalaya in particular. I condemn the current Meghalaya Government and the Union Government for their continued apathy and ignorance towards the sentiments of people of the state.’
Slamming the MDA Government over the issue of unemployment, he added, “Inclusion of these two languages will benefit the people of the state as a recognised language nationally that can be taught in high schools, used as a second language for competitive examinations, and open more job opportunities for them.”
“With this matter coming up for discussion in Parliament today, Meghalaya TMC has proven itself to be a credible alternative that has and will continue to push Meghalaya specific issues at the national level, something that the ruling dispensation has failed to do ever since coming to power,” the party stated.
TMC MP Sudip Bandopadhyay said that on September 27, 2018, the Meghalaya Legislative Assembly had adopted a resolution to petition the central government to include the Khasi and Garo languages in the Eighth Schedule of the Indian Constitution.
“We urge the Union government to take cognizance of the state’s demand to include Garo and Khasi in the eighth schedule,” he said.
He said Article 29 of the Constitution states that a section of citizens having a distinct language, script, or culture has the right to conserve the same. Under the Meghalaya State Legislature Act 2005, Garo and Khasi have been declared associate official languages.
He further stated that the Khasi is an Austro-Asiatic language spoken primarily among the tribe in Meghalaya and hilly areas of Assam. Garo is a Tibeto-Burmese language of the Boro-Jingpko group, spoken in Meghalaya, Assam, Tripura, Nagaland.
According to the Census 2011, there are over 13 lakh (46.5%) Khasi speakers and 9 lakhs (31.5%) Garo speakers. The issue in inclusion of the two languages has been the lack of their own original script, he added.
Expressing similar views, TMC legislator from Umroi George B Lyngdoh said, “On this historic day, I would like to thank all the party leaders, especially our honourable chairperson Smt. Mamata Banerjee, our honorable National General Secretary Shri Abhishek Banerjee, our leaders in Loksabha and Rajyasabha who have really stood by the people and citizens of Meghalaya. They have raised a very important demand of including the Garo and Khasi languages under the eighth schedule.”
He claimed that “never before have we seen a national party taking the voices of the MLAs and MPs who represent the people of the state and the union, to a protest outside the Parliament on the demand of the inclusion of Garo and Khasi languages in the eighth schedule of the constitution of India.”
It is indeed much more important to note that the voices were not only raised outside the Parliament, but also inside, on the Parliament’s floor.
This kind of an effort would continue beyond the inclusion of languages. We would raise all pertinent issues of the state, giving a voice to the people. “We once again thank the people who are standing by us, standing by the party, and standing the important cause of including Garo and Khasi as languages listed under the eighth schedule of the constitution of India,” he said.
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