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The Supreme Court of India on Monday officially admitted a crucial petition challenging the cancellation and subsequent reinstatement of approximately 32,000 primary school teacher jobs in West Bengal. A division bench comprising Justice Dipankar Dutta and Justice Satish Chandra Sharma accepted the case for an extensive review and issued formal notices to all the involved parties. The apex court scheduled the detailed final hearing to be conducted in the third week of August, marking another dramatic chapter in the state’s long-standing academic recruitment disputes.
During the preliminary proceedings on Monday, Justice Dipankar Dutta made a profound verbal observation highlighting the core ethical responsibility of the judiciary. He remarked that the apex court would essentially evaluate whether the individuals tasked with shaping the future of young children possess the required genuine qualifications. The bench's observation strongly indicates that the evaluation of the recruitment process will move beyond technical legal arguments, focusing heavily on systemic educational transparency and meritocratic eligibility standards.
The origins of the legal tussle date back to May 12, 2023, when the then Calcutta High Court Justice Abhijit Gangopadhyay ordered the wholesale termination of these 32,000 primary school teachers over massive irregularities and a complete absence of aptitude tests. However, in December of the same year, a division bench of the Calcutta High Court completely overturned the single-judge bench's ruling, retaining the services of the thousands of teachers on purely humanitarian grounds. The division bench had argued that despite existing procedural corruption, canceling jobs after nine years of service would cause severe distress to thousands of dependent families.