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CM inaugurates Delhi govt's armed forces school

CM inaugurates Delhi govts armed forces school
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New Delhi: Chief Minister Arvind Kejriwal on Saturday inaugurated the city's first school which will prepare students for the armed forces.

The Shaheed Bhagat Singh Armed Forces Preparatory School at Jharoda Kalan in Najafgarh currently has 175 students.

Kejriwal asked the students to imbibe the feeling of living and dying for the nation.

The state-of-the-art school has an exclusive services preparatory wing to inculcate officer-like qualities (OLQs) in students through individual and group tasks, mock interviews, psychometric tests and personality development workshops.

It has a free hostel facility with cadet mess for boys and girls and is part of the Delhi government's School of Specialised Excellence and affiliated to the Delhi Board of School Education. It is open to all Delhi residents and students can take admission in Classes 9 and Class 11, officials said.

"Delhi Government's Armed Forces Preparatory School starts today besides special education, students will get four-year long coaching for the National Defence Academy and similar competitions for free," Kejriwal said. The chief minister said the school offers services "one wouldn't get in the most posh schools".

"Eighty to ninety per cent of the students here have been absorbed from government schools itself. Education is completely free in our schools, all the children here get the same facilities to eliminate the rich and poor divide," he said.

He said the school was built within a year and they have surpassed their own expectations.

"Couple of years back, we realised how Delhi has no Sainik School to prepare cadets for the army. Within just one year, we built this school and even surpassed our own expectations," he asserted.

The school also offers extensive preparation (academic and service preparatory) for students aspiring to join the NDA/Naval Academy and other Uniformed Services.

"A lot of students used to prepare on their own and appear for these tests which includes the NDA and other entrance exams. Other states had Sainik Schools but Delhi never had any school of that kind," he said.

Motivating students to

dedicate their entire lives for the country, Kejriwal recalled his student days at IIT Kharagpur from where he passed out in 1989.

"At that time only I thought of doing something for the country. A lot of students went abroad and settled there. It is our own country and we have to work for it. I will live, fight and die here for the betterment of the country," he said.

More than 18,000 applications were received this year for admission to the school.

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