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'ఆప్​ ఎమ్మెల్యేల కొనుగోలుకు భాజపా యత్నం!'

ఆమ్​ఆద్మీ పార్టీకి చెందిన ఏడుగురు ఎమ్మెల్యేలను ప్రలోభపెట్టి, తమవైపునకు తిప్పుకునేందుకు భాజపా ప్రయత్నించిందని ఆరోపించారు ఆప్​ అధినేత అరవింద్ కేజ్రీవాల్. ఇందుకు ఒక్కొక్కరికి రూ.10కోట్లు ఇస్తామని ఆశచూపారని చెప్పారు.

'ఆప్​ ఎమ్మెల్యేల కొనుగోలుకు భాజపా యత్నం!'
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Published : May 2, 2019, 10:13 AM IST

ఆమ్​ఆద్మీ పార్టీకి చెందిన ఏడుగురు శాసనసభ్యుల్ని కొనుగోలు చేసేందుకు భాజపా ప్రయత్నించిందని దిల్లీ ముఖ్యమంత్రి అరవింద్​ కేజ్రీవాల్​ ఆరోపించారు. బుధవారం దిల్లీలో ఎన్నికల ప్రచారం నిర్వహించిన ఆయన... తమ ప్రభుత్వం చేసిన అభివృద్ధి పనులే ఆప్​ను గెలిపిస్తాయని ధీమా వ్యక్తం చేశారు. దిల్లీ అభివృద్ధిని కేంద్రంలోని ఎన్డీఏ సర్కారు అడ్డుకుందని విమర్శించారు కేజ్రీవాల్.

మీడియాతో మాట్లాడుతున్న కేజ్రీవాల్​

"గత మూడు రోజుల్లో మా పార్టీకి చెందిన ఏడుగురు ఎమ్మెల్యేలకు రూ.10కోట్లు ఇస్తామని భాజపా నేతలు సంప్రదించినట్లు వారు నాతో చెప్పారు. ప్రధాని స్థాయి వ్యక్తి ఇలాంటి చర్యలకు పాల్పడటం సరికాదు. బంగాల్​లో 40 మంది తృణమూల్ కాంగ్రెస్​ ఎమ్మెల్యేలు తనతో టచ్​లో ఉన్నారు, ప్రభుత్వాన్ని కూల్చివేస్తామని ఇటీవలే ప్రధాని అన్నారు. ఎమ్మెల్యేలను కొనుగోలు చేసి ప్రభుత్వాలను పడగొట్టాలనుకోవడం తప్పు."
-అరవింద్​ కేజ్రీవాల్​, దిల్లీ సీఎం

దిల్లీలో ఏడు లోక్​సభ స్థానాలకు ఆరోవిడత ఎన్నికల్లో భాగంగా మే 12న పోలింగ్ జరగనుంది. మే 23న ఫలితాలు వెలువడతాయి.

ఇదీ చూడండి:రాహుల్​గాంధీకి ఈసీ 'షోకాజ్​' నోటీసులు

ఆమ్​ఆద్మీ పార్టీకి చెందిన ఏడుగురు శాసనసభ్యుల్ని కొనుగోలు చేసేందుకు భాజపా ప్రయత్నించిందని దిల్లీ ముఖ్యమంత్రి అరవింద్​ కేజ్రీవాల్​ ఆరోపించారు. బుధవారం దిల్లీలో ఎన్నికల ప్రచారం నిర్వహించిన ఆయన... తమ ప్రభుత్వం చేసిన అభివృద్ధి పనులే ఆప్​ను గెలిపిస్తాయని ధీమా వ్యక్తం చేశారు. దిల్లీ అభివృద్ధిని కేంద్రంలోని ఎన్డీఏ సర్కారు అడ్డుకుందని విమర్శించారు కేజ్రీవాల్.

మీడియాతో మాట్లాడుతున్న కేజ్రీవాల్​

"గత మూడు రోజుల్లో మా పార్టీకి చెందిన ఏడుగురు ఎమ్మెల్యేలకు రూ.10కోట్లు ఇస్తామని భాజపా నేతలు సంప్రదించినట్లు వారు నాతో చెప్పారు. ప్రధాని స్థాయి వ్యక్తి ఇలాంటి చర్యలకు పాల్పడటం సరికాదు. బంగాల్​లో 40 మంది తృణమూల్ కాంగ్రెస్​ ఎమ్మెల్యేలు తనతో టచ్​లో ఉన్నారు, ప్రభుత్వాన్ని కూల్చివేస్తామని ఇటీవలే ప్రధాని అన్నారు. ఎమ్మెల్యేలను కొనుగోలు చేసి ప్రభుత్వాలను పడగొట్టాలనుకోవడం తప్పు."
-అరవింద్​ కేజ్రీవాల్​, దిల్లీ సీఎం

దిల్లీలో ఏడు లోక్​సభ స్థానాలకు ఆరోవిడత ఎన్నికల్లో భాగంగా మే 12న పోలింగ్ జరగనుంది. మే 23న ఫలితాలు వెలువడతాయి.

ఇదీ చూడండి:రాహుల్​గాంధీకి ఈసీ 'షోకాజ్​' నోటీసులు

RESTRICTION SUMMARY: AP CLIENTS ONLY
SHOTLIST:
ASSOCIATED PRESS - AP CLIENTS ONLY
Brasilia - 28 March 2019
1. Various of policemen inside the school looking at the pupils entering the building
2. Close of policeman with a gun on his waist
3. Various of policeman calling a student and making her to roll down the cuff of her pants
4. Wide of students in formation inside a gym
5. Mid of police shouting at students (Portuguese) Upsound "Rest! Don't move"
6. Wide of student in formation and policeman next to him
7. Close and wide of students carrying the Brazilian flag and singing the national anthem
8. Mid of student talking with a policewoman
9. Mid of students and head officer at the school, Major Edney Freire, entering at the class room
10. Wide of students saluting the Major Freire
11. Pan right from student listening to Major Freire speaking
12. SOUNDBITE (Portuguese) Major Edney Freire, head officer at state school No. 7 in Ceilândia:
"The pupil, the male pupil, can't enter or remain in the school with a cap, or with an earring. The pupil, female, she can wear an earring if it's a discrete one, and (there are) other things (rules) we are gradually giving to them."
13. Various of students outside the classroom
14. Michael Pereira da Silva talking to his friend
15. SOUNDBITE (Portuguese) Michael Pereira da Silva, student:
"This model (of police in schools) removed our individuality, as we said, because of the hair cut (all male pupils have to use the hair cut and girls with long hair must have it tied back), or because the pupils who can't wear an earring anymore, the afro (afro descendants people) also have problems with their hair cut. It (the model of the school) removes all that, even a sweater will be changed because we will have to wear a standard sweater. So, it (the model of the school) removes our individuality, our freedom."
ASSOCIATED PRESS - AP CLIENTS ONLY
Brasilia - 29 March 2019
16. Various of policeman talking to a group of students
ASSOCIATED PRESS- AP CLIENTS ONLY
Brasilia - 28 March 2019
17. SOUNDBITE (Portuguese) Major Edney Freire, head officer at state school No. 7 in Ceilândia:
"The monitor has different tasks.  Among them, to verify if the pupil is behaving properly, even during the break. If he (the pupil) is arriving late, if he has a healthy (proper) relationship with other colleagues. For example, if there is any kind of problem among the pupils, the monitor will go there to talk to them, he (monitor) will call the parents."
18. Various of policeman talking to pupils inside the classroom
19. Wide of students at the school
ASSOCIATED PRESS - AP CLIENTS ONLY
São Paulo - 11 April 2019
20. Mid of Claudia Costin, expert in education
21. SOUNDBITE (Portuguese) Claudia Costin, expert in Education:
"A professor is a professor and a policeman is a policeman.  Those are two different public policies where they (police and professor) are 'actors' but, it's not good for the policeman to have a role inside the school as a leader of discipline."
ASSOCIATED PRESS - AP CLIENTS ONLY
Brasilia - 28 March 2019
22. Mid of students in the school
ASSOCIATED PRESS - AP CLIENTS ONLY
Brasilia - 29 March 2019
23. Various of professor Roberto, in the classroom
24. SOUNDBITE (Portuguese) Roberto Schiavini, professor:
"The references I have studied is that in other states, where the military school model was applied, the performance has improved not because it is under the military police (model), the students became better students, but because they were slowly being replaced. A public school in the suburbs had so many demands to fulfill for timing, for wearing a uniform, that they (students enrolled) were leaving and were replaced (by other students)."
ASSOCIATED PRESS - AP CLIENTS ONLY
Brasilia - 28 March 2019
25. Various of policeman with a gun on his waist looking at students in formation
26. SOUNDBITE (Portuguese) Adriana de Barros, director of the school:
"Some pupils left because they were not feeling comfortable. They were not feeling they were part of the project or that they were apt to be in the project. But there were also a lot of new pupils. For the first time we had parents sleeping in the line (outside the school) for the vacancies."
27. Mid of Adriana da Silva and her son, Vitor Hugo, in the school
28. SOUNDBITE (Portuguese) Adriana da Silva, mother of a student:
"Today I can see his attitude at home, in the school, and the interest (for doing things, for discipline) is higher than it was in the other (school). In the other (school) he thought, 'nothing will happen, it's ok' but not here. Here we feel the model and the rules make a difference in his life."
29. Various of Major Freire talking to female students
ASSOCIATED PRESS- AP CLIENTS ONLY
Brasilia - 29 March 2019
30. Various of policemen outside the school
31. Panning from the policemen to students walking next to the school
STORYLINE:
When students at Ceilândia state school No. 7 in Brazil's capital came back from their break in February, they were met by two dozen uniformed police officers in a place they barely recognized anymore.
Guns in their holsters, the officers ordered students to form rows in the schoolyard.
The students were given white T-shirts pending the arrival of their uniforms.
From now on, boys would have to keep their hair short and girls tied at the back.
No more shorts, caps, brightly colored nail varnish, earrings or any distinctive pieces of clothing. Students arriving late wouldn't be let in.
The quasi-military approach is one of the most visible educational efforts happening under new Brazilian President Jair Bolsonaro, a former army captain who campaigned on promises to improve Brazilian schools, which are widely recognized as a problem.
A 2015 study by the Organization for Economic Cooperation and Development ranked educational performance in Brazil as 63rd out of 72 countries and regions.
Schools co-run by police are modeled after Brazil's exclusive military colleges, which are run by the armed forces and tend to perform better than most public schools - a fact that makes many parents eager to see similarly rigid discipline.
Under the model, teaching remains in the hands of the education ministry, while police officers oversee discipline and enforce a new code of conduct. Implementation of the pilot program in a school must be approved by a majority of parents, teachers and school staff in a referendum.
The Ceilândia school is one of four in Brasilia that voted to take part.
Officials in Brazil's capital hope to add 36 more schools by the end of the year and reach a total of 200 by 2022.
Bolsonaro's administration is pushing similar expansions nationwide, though it has yet to say how many it plans to convert across the country.
Some states have been exploring the model since the early 2000s, but a large expansion worries many education experts and teachers' unions, who say such schools can become exclusionary and go against the concept of a free, open-to-all public schooling system.
"A professor is a professor and a policeman is a policeman, those are two different public policies where they (police and professor) are 'actors' but, it's not good the policeman to have a role inside the school as a leader of the discipline" said Claudia Costin, an expert in Education and former Director for Education at the World Bank.
Those against the model, argue that these schools have managed to improve results because problematic students are quietly substituted for better performing ones, often from wealthier backgrounds.
"A public school in the suburbs had so many demands to fulfill for timing, for wearing a uniform, that they (students enrolled) were leaving and were replaced (by other students)," said Roberto Schiavini, a professor at the school in Brasilia applying the model.
Another red flag for critics is the introduction of guns in schools, particularly in the nation that leads the world in total homicides each year, the majority from firearms.
The expansion is a flagship measure of the Bolsonaro administration but a spokeswoman for the education ministry said it had no data on how many such schools existed or studies on long-term benefits of the model.
Besides putting police in some schools, the far-right government of Bolsonaro has been pushing for other changes in the country's public education sector, accusing it of being filled with "Marxist ideology."
The education ministry has talked of revising history books used in teaching to refer to Brazil's 1964-1985 dictatorship as a "democratic regime of force" and of excising references to feminism, homosexuality and violence against women.
Most recently, Bolsonaro said public funding for sociology and philosophy could be eliminated.
In recent years, some schools taken over by the police have garnered headlines when prosecutors have had to intervene after they began charging monthly fees to parents, imposed expensive uniforms or sought to set aside half of the school's places for children of police officers.
In 2016, the head of education for police in the state of Goias revised the school system's internal regulation that normalized "expulsions" and "forced transfers" of students.
The move followed a recommendation from state prosecutors who argued that in public education expulsions must remain a last recourse.
The administration says it is targeting violent and low-performing schools or those located in at-risk areas, where drug trafficking takes place or paramilitary groups called militias operate.
According to the head officer in Ceilândia state school No. 7, Major Edney Freire, the duties of police officers, called "monitors," include making sure students don't fight.
"For example, if there is any kind of problem among the pupils, the monitor will go there to talk to them, he (monitor) will call the parents," he said.
It doesn't always work out in such calm fashion.
In Ceilândia, a crowded working-class neighborhood in the outskirts of Brazil's capital city, violence against teachers was not so much the problem.
But drug traffickers operated unfettered around the school and vagabonds were regularly seen drinking and using drugs in the area.
When the news came out that the school would enter in a partnership with the police, many parents sought to sign up their kids.
Some arrived two days before the school opened, camping outside the facility to make sure to get a spot for their child when the doors opened.
Students must line up in the school yard daily. Heels together, arms straight along their bodies, heads looking straight forward toward the school's Brazilian flag.
Adriana da Silva, the parent of 17-year-old student Vitor, said she had not been called in to the school to discuss the teen's conduct even once.
"Here we feel the model and the rules make a difference in his life," da Silva said.
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