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Rajya Sabha nod for Bill on three Central Sanskrit varsities

New Delhi: Rajya Sabha on Monday passed a bill to upgrade three deemed Sanskrit universities into central universities after some minor amendments.

The Central Sanskrit Universities Bill, 2019 was passed by voice vote in the Upper House.

It was passed by Lok Sabha in December last year and was introduced in Rajya Sabha on March 2 by Minister for Human Resource Development Ramesh Pokhriyal 'Nishank'

Since Rajya Sabha has passed the bill with amendments, it would now go to Lok Sabha again.

The Bill seeks to upgrade three deemed to be universities in Sanskrit -- Rashtriya Sanskrit Sansthan, Sri Lal Bahadur Shastri Rashtriya Sanskrit Vidyapeeth, and Rashtriya Sanskrit Vidyapeeth Tirupati -- into central universities.

Replying to the debate, Pokhriyal said the Modi government is committed to strengthen all Indian languages.

Speaking about the spread of Sanskrit, he said that around five crore students were studying the language in the country itself.

Besides, there were many countries across the world where the language was being taught, he added.

"All languages are important for us. We are committed for the growth of all languages that are spoken in the country," the minister asserted.

The passage of the bill in the Upper House will facilitate the growth of the language, he added.

Cutting across party lines, several members supported the bill during the debate.

Congress MP Jairam Ramesh, Sukhendu Sekhar Roy of AITC and Prashant Nanda of BJD spoke in Sanskrit.

However, DMK members opposed the bill saying it was "against" classical languages like Tamil.

Initiating the debate, Jairam Ramesh said that though he supports the bill as it will help the cause of Sanskrit, which is a scientific language and part of cultural legacy, the government was neglecting other classical languages.

"Sanskrit has always been a monopoly of few and that is a matter of great sadness and tragedy for India. We have to make this monopoly into a treasure of many and that is what this bill hopes to accomplish," he said.

However, the government is ignoring other classical Indian languages such as Tamil, Telugu, Kannada, Malayalam and Odia which are spoken by millions of people, while Sanskrit is spoken only by hardly 15,000 people in India, he added.

Referring to a reply by the Minister of Culture in Lok Sabha on February 3, 2020, he said in the last three years the Centre has spent Rs 640 on Sanskrit's popularisation.

While it had spent Rs 24 crore on Tamil, Rs 3 crore each on Telugu and Kannada and nil on Malayalam and Odia.

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