Bhubaneswar: Facing widespread criticism over an official booklet describing Mahatama Gandhi's death as an 'accident', the Odisha government on Saturday said that it was an inadvertent mistake and there was no intention to feed wrong information to the children or twist the sequence of events.
School and Mass Education Minister Samir Ranjan Dash came out with the government response to the controversy in the state Assembly following a direction from Speaker SN Patro in this regard on Friday.
Dash said that the government has already withdrawn the booklet.
An official has been disengaged and two others have been asked to give an explanation about the error, he added.
A two-page government booklet "Aama Bapuji: Eka Jhalaka" (Our Bapuji: A Glimpse) -- published on the occasion of 150th birth anniversary of Mahatma Gandhi -- presented a brief account of his teachings, works and links with Odisha, while also stating that he "died due to accidental reasons in a sudden sequence of events on January 30, 1948, at Delhi's Birla House".
The matter triggered a row with political leaders and activists demanding an apology from Chief Minister Naveen Patnaik and immediate measures to correct the 'blunder'.
The issue had created hue and cry in the assembly on Friday. Members cutting across party lines had expressed concern over the misleading facts on the Father of the Nation.
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"There is no intention to give wrong information and mislead the children or twist the sequence of events. It was (mistake) unintentional," Dash said.