Odisha Textbook Error Row Intensifies: NSUI Protests, Demands Education Minister Nityananda Gond's Resignation

Odisha Textbook Error Row Intensifies: NSUI Protests, Demands Education Minister Nityananda Gond's Resignation

Congress-affiliated NSUI staged a protest in Bhubaneswar demanding the resignation of Odisha School and Mass Education Minister Nityananda Gond over alleged errors in newly introduced school textbooks. Several activists were detained after attempting to gherao his residence. Amid claims of around 1,700 mistakes, the state government has formed a committee to investigate the controversy.

PTIUpdated: Thursday, June 18, 2026, 09:41 PM IST
Odisha Textbook Error Row Intensifies: NSUI Protests, Demands Education Minister Nityananda Gond's Resignation
Odisha Textbook Error Row Intensifies: NSUI Protests, Demands Education Minister Nityananda Gond's Resignation | X @ANI

Bhubaneswar: Members of the Congress-affiliated NSUI held a demonstration in Bhubaneswar on Thursday, demanding the resignation of School and Mass Education Minister Nityananda Gond over alleged errors in newly introduced school textbooks.

Carrying posters, banners and copies of the popular Odia alphabet primer 'Madhu Barnabodha', NSUI activists marched towards the minister's official residence and attempted to gherao it.

Tension briefly flared when police stopped the protesters from advancing towards the residence. A scuffle ensued, following which several NSUI activists were detained and taken away in police vehicles.

NSUI leader Yashir Nawaz claimed that around 1,700 errors had been identified in the books prepared for school students.

"The minister and his department are playing with the future of students. Public money worth around Rs 50 crore has been wasted," he alleged.

Demanding Gond's resignation, Nawaz said the minister had failed in his responsibilities, and called for an impartial inquiry into the circumstances that led to the alleged mistakes in the textbooks.

Meanwhile, the RSS-affiliated ABVP also criticised the errors, describing them as "totally unacceptable".

In a statement, the students' organisation demanded action against the teachers and officials responsible for the mistakes in the textbooks prepared by the State Council of Educational Research and Training (SCERT), Odisha.

The ABVP further urged the School and Mass Education Department to ensure that all necessary corrections are made before the books are distributed to students.

The controversy erupted after a section of government school teachers pointed out several errors in the textbooks, including spelling mistakes and incorrect references to eminent personalities. The books were prepared in accordance with the National Education Policy (NEP) 2020 and prescribed for the 2026-27 academic session.

Amid the row, Chief Minister Mohan Charan Majhi on Wednesday ordered the formation of a three-member committee to identify those responsible for the errors.

(Except for the headline, this article has not been edited by FPJ's editorial team and is auto-generated from an agency feed.)