Karnataka to spend Rs 2,500 cr to upgrade higher edu institutions
Karnataka Law and Parliamentary Affairs Minister HK Patil said Rs 1,750 crore will be borrowed from the World Bank while Rs 750 crore will be the State government’s share
PTI
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Representative Picture
Bengaluru, 6 Dec
The Karnataka Cabinet on Friday
decided to spend Rs 2,500 crore to upgrade the government higher education
institutions, for which it will borrow Rs 1,750 crore.
The government has decided to implement
a scheme for strengthening government higher education institutions with
external funding of Rs 2,500 crore, Karnataka Law and Parliamentary Affairs
Minister HK Patil told reporters after the cabinet meeting.
He said Rs 1,750 crore will be borrowed
from the World Bank while Rs 750 crore will be the State government’s share.
This amount of Rs 2,500 crore would
be spent over a period of four years, starting from July 2025 and a preliminary
project report would be submitted to the World Bank through the Department of
Economic Affairs, Government of India for approval of external funding.
“The primary objective of the
department is to provide quality education and the aim is to provide resources
to private institutions in the state to improve the standard of higher
education,” the Minister told reporters.
The government also resolved to
publish the draft of the Karnataka Educational Institutions (Terms and
Conditions for Recognition of Minority Educational Institutions) (College
Education) (1st Amendment) Rules, 2024 (Annexure-3) in the Karnataka Gazette
and invite objections and suggestions from those affected thereby.
If no objections or suggestions are
received to the draft rules or no major amendments are made in the draft rules
after considering the objections or suggestions received, the said draft rules
will be finalised without re-presenting them before the Cabinet, Patil said.
Since the population of Muslim,
Christian, Sikh, Jain, Buddhist and Parsi communities in the total minority
population of the State is very low, it was proposed to amend these rules as it
was difficult to obtain the percentage of students prescribed in the existing
rules and orders for declaring educational institutions run by minority
communities as minority educational institutions.
The cabinet also gave its nod to
the Phase-3A of the Bengaluru Metro Rail project from Sarjapur to Hebbal
covering a distance of 36.59 km. It comprises 22.14 km of elevated line with 17
metro stations and 14.45 km of tunnel lines with 11 stations, at a total
estimated cost of Rs. 28,405.00 crore.
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