res : Kerala adalah negara bahagian dari India- Sejak lama perintah Kerala 
dikuasai oleh Partai Komunis. Informasi tentang kerala, click : 
http://classroom.synonym.com/did-communism-marxism-flourish-kerala-state-india-19295.html

http://www.ucanews.com/news/communist-kerala-minister-warns-church-on-commercialization-of-schools/78155

Communist Kerala minister warns church on commercialization of schools 
Most of church-run colleges, except a few, have turned into commercial 
ventures, says Chief Minister Pinarayi Vijayan 
Cardinal Baselios Cleemis of Trivandrum, center, addressing media after an 
inter-church council meeting in the Kerala state capital on Jan. 17. Also seen 
are Bishop Aprem Mooken, the Metropolitan of the Assyrian Church of the East in 
India, left, and Cardinal George Alencherry, president of the inter-church 
council that governs church-run educational institutions in the state. (Photo 
courtesy of Kerala Catholic Bishops Council press office)

T.K. Devasia, Kochi 
India January 23, 2017 
The southern Indian Kerala state chief minister and communist leader has 
lambasted some private schools for corrupt practices and warned that the 
church, which has worked extensively in education, not to fall prey to the 
commercial education lobby.

Pinarayi Vijayan spoke at the diamond jubilee of church-run Devagiri St. 
Joseph's College in Kozhikode district on Jan. 17. He lauded the Christian 
service in education but warned that it is fast becoming a for-profit 
enterprise.

His comments came following the suicide of a student studying at a 
privately-funded engineering college after he was accused of cheating. Other 
students claimed they were victims of economic exploitation and rights 
violations at the college.

The suicide prompted activists from student unions and the Left Democratic 
Front led coalition Kerala government not to go on the rampage and attack 
several colleges. College management had to appeal to the government for 
protection.

The chief minister traced the roots of the current trouble to the 
commercialization of education. "Education has become a profit-making mission 
after self-financing colleges were introduced. The church, which initially 
refused to commercialize education, has now become part of the trend. Most of 
the church-run colleges, except a few, have turned into commercial ventures," 
he said.

The state government will investigate any financial irregularities in such 
institutions, he said.

Self-financing colleges are paid for by student tuition fees and run without 
any government help. They were introduced in 2002 in Kerala to meet the 
increasing demand for education.

Kerala had 15 state-managed colleges in 2002. Now there are 156 colleges with 
58,242 students. Christian churches, including Catholics, run 18 colleges that 
are governed by an inter-church council.

Cardinal George Alencherry, president of the council, said that it was not fair 
to generalize the issue of corruption and profit and said Christian 
institutions were being run in a transparent manner.

"Isolated incidents" of mismanagement "should not be used to cast aspersions on 
all," said the cardinal, head of the powerful Syro-Malabar Church in the state.

The church's spokesman, Jimmy Poochakkat, said that they will cooperate with 
any government investigation.

Council secretary, Father George Madakkaparampil said that sometimes colleges 
take Christian names to tap the popularity of Christian education. "The church 
cannot be blamed if there are irregularities in such colleges," he said.

However, P. Biju, a youth leader of the Communist Party of India, told 
ucanews.com that investigating self-financing colleges would not be easy 
because a powerful lobby will block the move.

He pointed out that the state's Vigilance and Anti-Corruption Bureau, which was 
directed by the government to probe corruption in some colleges, could not 
proceed because there was an absence of official complaints.

"The students, who faced grievances, are not ready to come out openly as they 
fear that the college management will target them," he said.

Christians have for long alleged that Kerala state's Communist-led government 
has adopted a "hostile attitude" toward their educational institutions. 

The church-communist tussle began in 1957 when Kerala became the first state to 
democratically elect a communist government. A church-led "vimochana samaram" 
(liberation struggle) led to the government's dismissal in 1959.

The communists have since come to power several times, facing opposition from 
the politically influential church whenever it tried to introduce major new 
education schemes.

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