Reacting to the controversy following an assistant professor allegedly referring to a student as "Kasab", Karnataka Minister of School Education and Literacy B C Nagesh said that it was "not so serious".
He also sought to know why names from a particular community became a national issue, but names like "Ravana" or "Shakuni", which are so commonly used for referring to people, does not become an issue at all.
"It is unfortunate, the incident shouldn't have taken place, the teacher should not have used that name. But I also feel that it is not such (a) serious thing, because we use the name of ‘Ravana’ for many students many times, we also use the name of ‘Shakuni’ many times, but that doesn't become an issue at all," Nagesh said.
Speaking to reporters, he said, "Why the name of (a person) who belongs to a particular community becomes an issue, I don't know. Though the issue has been taken seriously and action has been taken against the teacher but why some names become a national issue, I cannot understand."
On Monday, a video showing an assistant professor in Manipal calling a student by the name ”Kasab”, and the student countering it, had gone viral.
Later, the professor tendered an apology. The video had gone viral on social media, and the university has debarred the faculty from classes.
Nagesh's comments came amidst Congress president Mallikarjun Kharge's "Ravana" barb at Prime Minister Narendra Modi, which triggered a political slugfest between Congress and the BJP.
Taking a swipe at Modi at a rally in Behrampura area of Ahmedabad city on Monday, Kharge had said the prime minister asks people to vote ”looking at his face” in all elections. ”Are you 100-headed like Ravan,” he had said.
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