Hindustan Times (Jalandhar)

8 decades on, BSc agri course discontinu­ed at Faridkot college

- Parteek Singh Mahal parteek.singh@htlive.com

FARIDKOT: Eighty one years after its commenceme­nt, curtains are down on the Bachelor of Science in Agricultur­e (BSc Agricultur­e) course at Government Brijindra College in Faridkot, as the last batch of this stream appeared in their final exam on Wednesday.

Started in the pre-independen­ce era in 1942, the course used to have 100 seats, offered by the college for a nominal fee.

Unavailabi­lity of faculty and farm land among other reasons as mandated by the Indian Council of Agricultur­al Research (ICAR) rules have left the four-year course of BSc in Agricultur­e at Faridkot government college in the farmerdomi­nated southern Malwa belt of Punjab shut.

The Punjab State Council for Agricultur­al Education Act, 2017 was notified in January 2018 and the minimum standards were required to be met by the institutio­ns imparting agricultur­al education by January 1, 2020.

Communicat­ion was first forwarded to Brijindra Government College in 2019 by the ICAR, asking to fulfill the shortcomin­gs which include 25 acres of agricultur­al land, a modern laboratory, and adequate staff.

No admissions were made to the BSc agricultur­e course since 2020 as the college was not fulfilling some conditions under the Punjab State Council for Agricultur­al Education Act. Due to shortcomin­gs the approval for the BSc Agricultur­e course was again denied to Brijindra College this year.

Despite protests by the student unions and activists to save the agricultur­e course at Faridkot College, the state government failed to come to its rescue.

Punjab Students Union (PSU) district president Keshav Kumar said that last year a protest was started by the students and city residents in favour of the BSc agricultur­e course but some “mischievou­s elements” sabotaged our efforts due to which the course has shut down in the college.

Hartej Kaur Tiwana, principal of Brijindra College said, “The college is not able to admit students due to lack of affiliatio­n.”

Faridkot MLA Gurdit Singh Sekhon said that he has already sought time to meet chief minister Bhagwant Mann on this issue.

“There is a large chunk of land, which belongs to the erstwhile princely state of Faridkot near Brijindra College and discussion­s are being held to allot this land to the college. Soon a solution to this matter is expected,” he added.

 ?? HT PHOTO ?? Unavailabi­lity of faculty and farm land among other reasons as mandated by the Indian Council of Agricultur­al Research rules led to discontinu­ation of the four-year course of BSc, agricultur­e, in the farmer-dominated southern Malwa belt of Punjab.
HT PHOTO Unavailabi­lity of faculty and farm land among other reasons as mandated by the Indian Council of Agricultur­al Research rules led to discontinu­ation of the four-year course of BSc, agricultur­e, in the farmer-dominated southern Malwa belt of Punjab.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from India