Explorer

Build a university at Babri site: Manish Sisodia

Without taking any particular name, Sisodia slammed the political parties of spreading casteism at university levels "by appointing Vice Chancellors subscribing to Hindutva who try to impose it on the students".

New Delhi: Delhi Deputy Chief Minister Manish Sisodia has said a university should come up at the site of the disputed Babri Masjid-Ram Janmabhoomi site in Ayodhya in Uttar Pradesh. He emphasised that ‘Ram Rajya' can be ushered through education and not by constructing a grand temple. "My stand is that with a consensus from both sides (Hindus and Muslims), let's build a good university at that place," Sisodia said in an interview with NDTV that was aired on Sunday. "Hindu, Muslim, Christian, Indian, foreigner -- students from all communities may attend that university and from there should spring Lord Ram's ideals. Ram Rajya would come if we teach our children and not by building a mandir," Sisodia said when asked what was the Aam Aadmi Party's (AAP) stand on Ram Mandir debate. Asked about the current wave of caste politics in Indian politics, Sisodia, who is also Delhi's Education Minister, said that the only way to end it was through education. "When I was at Japan University, the people there were talking about a new concept of running cars with hydrogen and on the same day on Twitter we were debating about Lord Hanuman's caste. It is really unfortunate but the only way to move forward is by education," he said. Without taking any particular name, Sisodia slammed the political parties of spreading casteism at university levels "by appointing Vice Chancellors subscribing to Hindutva who try to impose it on the students". "On one hand, you talk about ‘Digital India' but your actions resemble that of Vijay Mallya," Sisodia said. Talking about the Lok Sabha elections due next year, Sisodia said the AAP government would be focusing on all the seven Lok Sabha seats in Delhi. "We will also keep our focus on Punjab and Haryana for the 2019 elections," he said. When asked whether Delhi Police should be with the state government, Sisodia remarked that even if his government plans to take an action, it never gets implemented on the ground level because of different governments controlling different authorities in Delhi. "Delhi Police need to be under the Delhi government," he said. He also said the previous Sheila Dikshit-led government "didn't do any work" in Delhi. "If her government had done anything, we wouldn't have to struggle like this to get work done," he said.

Top Headlines

Congress To Issue Show-Cause Notices For 'Cross-Voting' Haryana MLAs In RS Polls
Congress To Issue Show-Cause Notices For 'Cross-Voting' Haryana MLAs In RS Polls
Ashwini Vaishnaw Rejects Opposition's Claim Saying 'Railways Not For Poor'
Ashwini Vaishnaw Rejects Opposition's Claim Saying 'Railways Not For Poor'
Rain Likely In Delhi For Three Days; Weather Department Issues Yellow Alert
Rain Likely In Delhi For Three Days; Weather Department Issues Yellow Alert
TMC Fields 291 Candidates, Mamata Skips Nandigram; 3 Seats Left For Ally
TMC Fields 291 Candidates, Mamata Skips Nandigram; 3 Seats Left For Ally

Videos

Breaking News: Pakistan Bombs Kabul Residential Areas, India Condemns Attack on Civilians and Hospitals
Breaking: Iran Strikes U.S. Embassy in Baghdad, Gulf Tensions Escalate Amid Missile & Drone Attacks
BREAKING NOW: India Receives 47,000 MT LPG from Strait of Hormuz, Relief for Nationwide Gas Shortage
BREAKING NOW: LPG Tanker Nanda Devi Reaches India via Hormuz, Boosting Supply Amid Crisis Nationwide
GROUND REPORT: LPG Crisis Forces Sweet Makers to Wood Fires, Shortages Hit Homes and Shops

Photo Gallery

25°C
New Delhi
Rain: 100mm
Humidity: 97%
Wind: WNW 47km/h
See Today's Weather
powered by
Accu Weather
Embed widget