Decision to suspend teacher who sought more classrooms comes under fire in Karnataka

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Veeranna Madiwalar, headmaster of the government primary school at Ambedkar Nagar in Nidagundi in Belagavi district of Karnataka, held a silent protest demanding construction of four classrooms in his school, on May 27, 2025.

Veeranna Madiwalar, headmaster of the government primary school at Ambedkar Nagar in Nidagundi in Belagavi district of Karnataka, held a silent protest demanding construction of four classrooms in his school, on May 27, 2025. | Photo Credit: SPECIAL ARRANGEMENT

Some intellectuals and writers have criticised the decision of the government of Karnataka to suspend a primary school headmaster for his silent protest demanding four additional classrooms in Raibag in Belagavi district.

The zilla panchayat has issued an order suspending, until further inquiry, Veeranna Madiwalar, headmaster of the government primary school in Ambedkar Nagar in Nidagundi in Belagavi district, for holding a silent protest seeking construction of additional classrooms. The order says he had behaved ‘in a manner not befitting a government servant’.

Manner of protest

On May 27, Mr. Madiwalar had walked from his school to the Block Education Office, holding an image of Dr. B.R. Ambedkar and a placard demanding the construction of four rooms. He sat in front of the office and announced a fast unto death till his demand was met.

The BEO and tahsildar of Raibag told him that the government had sanctioned two rooms and the construction would begin soon. They asked him to withdraw his protest, but he did not do so. He said the protest would continue till the government gave a concrete assurance about new rooms.

The officials claimed that he argued with them in ‘an insensitive and uncivilised manner’.

Veeranna Madiwalar, headmaster of the government primary school at Ambedkar Nagar in Nidagundi in Belagavi district of Karnataka.

Veeranna Madiwalar, headmaster of the government primary school at Ambedkar Nagar in Nidagundi in Belagavi district of Karnataka. | Photo Credit: Special Arrangement

The teacher, however, claimed that the officers were blind to his sincere requests, and misinterpreted his intention. “They issued a suspension order within 24 hours of giving me a show-cause notice. The notice said I should respond in 24 hours. But I was suspended before I could do so,” he said.

Out of Kannada Sahitya Sammelana money

S.G. Siddaramaiah, former chairman of the Karnataka Book Authority, advised the State Government to stop organising the Kannada Sahitya Sammelana for a few years, and take up construction of classrooms and other infrastructure in all schools. The government spends between ₹20-30 crore per year on the sammelana. “That money could easily be diverted to such infrastructure creation,” he said.

Shashidhar Kosambe, member, Karnataka State Commission for Protection of Child Rights, said, “The State Government should immediately revoke the suspension and fulfil his demand for construction of four new rooms in the school. If the State Government delays these decisions, the commission will register a suo moto complaint against the officials responsible.”

He added that Mr. Madiwalar is also a sensitive poet, and has been awarded the Central Literary Award.

Detailed reply

Mr. Madiwalar said he had given a detailed reply to the government. “I have argued that I have not violated any rule, nor acted in an uncivilised manner. I am a disciplined government servant, and have done all that I could for developing the school. I have only said that I will continue to demand school rooms. Our school has 150 students from class one to seven, but has only two rooms. What is more, I am the only permanent teacher in our school. We need permanent teachers for all classes and enough classrooms,” he said.

Published - May 31, 2025 09:59 am IST

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