Delhi Nursery Admission Row: High Court Dismisses AAP Government's Appeal
New Delhi:
The Delhi High Court today dismissed the AAP government's appeal against a single judge's interim order staying its new nursery admission norms based on the neighbourhood criterion. A bench of Chief Justice G Rohini and Justice Sangita Dhingra Sehgal directed the single judge to decide the petitions expeditiously. "We have dismissed the appeal (of Delhi government).We, however, have directed the single judge to decide the petitions (challenging the Delhi government's decision) as expeditiously as possible," the bench said. It also said that the single judge should not go by its observation made in the interim order.
The division bench was hearing an appeal filed by the AAP government against a single judge's February 14 interim order.
The single judge had stayed Delhi government's new nursery admission norm, saying "a student's educational fate can't be relegated to only his/her position on a map". Terming the criterion as "arbitrary and discriminatory", Justice Manmohan had said it benefited only those parents who live close to good private schools.
Challenging the interim order, the Delhi government had said that in the absence of the neighbourhood criterion, schools will accept admission in an arbitrary and opaque manner, and even justify charging exorbitant fees.
Maintaining that the order passed by the single judge was "totally wrong", "erroneous" and "against the law", they had urged the division bench to stay on the operation of the order.
In two directives on December 19, 2016 and January 7, the Delhi government had made it compulsory for the 298 private schools built on Delhi Development Authority land to admit children for nursery who live in that neighbourhood or stay within a certain distance from the school.
Read: More updates on Delhi Nursery Admission
The single judge had ordered an interim stay of the January 7 notification till the final disposal of the pleas challenging the Delhi government's order. The two associations, representing the schools and the parents, had alleged that the Delhi government has "discriminated" as the neighbourhood criteria had been applied against only 298 schools and not been made mandatory for 1,400 other schools in the city.
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(This story has not been edited by NDTV staff and is auto-generated from a syndicated feed.)
The division bench was hearing an appeal filed by the AAP government against a single judge's February 14 interim order.
The single judge had stayed Delhi government's new nursery admission norm, saying "a student's educational fate can't be relegated to only his/her position on a map". Terming the criterion as "arbitrary and discriminatory", Justice Manmohan had said it benefited only those parents who live close to good private schools.
Challenging the interim order, the Delhi government had said that in the absence of the neighbourhood criterion, schools will accept admission in an arbitrary and opaque manner, and even justify charging exorbitant fees.
Maintaining that the order passed by the single judge was "totally wrong", "erroneous" and "against the law", they had urged the division bench to stay on the operation of the order.
In two directives on December 19, 2016 and January 7, the Delhi government had made it compulsory for the 298 private schools built on Delhi Development Authority land to admit children for nursery who live in that neighbourhood or stay within a certain distance from the school.
Read: More updates on Delhi Nursery Admission
The single judge had ordered an interim stay of the January 7 notification till the final disposal of the pleas challenging the Delhi government's order. The two associations, representing the schools and the parents, had alleged that the Delhi government has "discriminated" as the neighbourhood criteria had been applied against only 298 schools and not been made mandatory for 1,400 other schools in the city.
Click here for more Education News
(This story has not been edited by NDTV staff and is auto-generated from a syndicated feed.)