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Shameful and Enraging: The Hollow Clamour of Progress in Maharashtra’s Education System

As Maharashtra marks 66 years since its statehood, a deeply embarrassing and infuriating reality has come to light regarding its public education system. Despite the persistent political rhetoric surrounding a “progressive and digitally advanced Maharashtra,” a staggering number of government schools continue to languish in darkness, completely cut off from the modern world.

The Union Education Ministry’s latest ‘U-DISE Plus’ report has unveiled shocking discrepancies between the state’s claims of digital transformation and the actual infrastructure on the ground.

The Darkness Inside the Classrooms

While 93,999 schools in the state are officially registered as electrified, the operational reality is grim. A closer look at the data reveals a complete breakdown of infrastructure management:

Total Blackout: 3,201 schools in Maharashtra still do not have an active electricity connection at all.

Dysfunctional Power Lines: In 10,938 schools, power lines exist, but the supply is entirely unusable.

Defunct Infrastructure: In total, 14,140 schools across the state are operating with a completely broken or non-functioning electrical setup.

The Illusion of a ‘Digital India’

The report exposes an alarming waste of public funds on advanced electronic equipment that sits uselessly in classrooms due to the lack of basic power utilities:

Computers Collecting Dust: Out of the 90,419 schools equipped with computers, the systems in 5,889 schools are permanently shut down or broken.

No Internet Access: In an era driven by online connectivity, 23,855 schools lack basic internet access.

Deprived of Modern Libraries: An overwhelming majority of 94,589 schools are entirely deprived of digital libraries, with only a minor 13,550 schools enjoying this modern amenity.

Solar Alternative: While solar panels have been installed in 23,822 schools to bridge the gap, their maintenance and actual utilization remain highly questionable given the broader infrastructural failures.

Critical Analysis: Systemic Political Apathy

This operational failure is not just an administrative oversight; it is a profound political betrayal. The politicians who have held power, the opposition leaders who failed to question them, and the all-party lawmakers (MLAs and MPs) who represent these regions over the decades bear direct responsibility for this decay.

Buying expensive smart boards and computers while failing to provide a stable light bulb is a classic symptom of optics-over-substance governance. If the children of India’s richest state are forced to study in darkness 66 years after its formation, the entire political landscape stands compromised.