India

Leaders of Kerala and Karnataka blame each other as Malayalam bill row intensifies

Express Video Service

Kerala government's move to make Malayalam the compulsory first language in schools is facing backlash from Karnataka. The Malayalam Language Bill, 2025, was passed by the Kerala Legislative Assembly in October 2025. It mandates Malayalam as the compulsory first language in schools from classes 1 to 10

The Karnataka government alleges that the bill extends to areas with non-Malayalam medium schools, especially near the Karnataka–Kerala. The Bill still awaits the Governor’s assent as part of before becoming law

On Thursday, Karnataka Chief Minister Siddaramaiah criticised the bill and said that he will oppose it. However, Kerala leaders point out that Clause 7 of the Malayalam Language Bill 2025 safeguards the rights of Tamil and Kannada speakers. Several leaders from both states criticised the stances of both governments

CJP protest over NEET paper leak enters third day at Delhi’s Jantar Mantar

We will go to war: Pakistan Defence Minister’s warning to India over Indus waters

BJP rebel stuns Mahayuti, defeats Sena nominee in Nashik council polls

Tiruvallur ammonia leak: Death toll rises to five, 67 under treatment

‘Major progress’ in Iran-US talks as Lebanon de-confliction cell is agreed

SCROLL FOR NEXT