Modi govt has already linked 425 teenagers from Gujarat’s Kevadiya with 2019 batch civil servants. Now it plans to expand the scheme country-wide.
The initiative, which was formally launched during the first-ever common foundation course for civil service trainees of the 2019 batch, aims to provide mentorship to underprivileged and socially or economically-backward children studying in class 10 and above.
In the first batch, the government has identified 425 children from 11 villages in Kevadiya, Gujarat, where Sardar Patel’s ‘Statue of Unity’ is located, and associated them with the 425 officer trainees of 20 civil services, including the IAS, IPS, IFS and IRS.
“The idea is in sync with the government’s desire to provide mentorship to those from underprivileged backgrounds, and also instil a sense of social responsibility among civil servants,” the official added.
“It will also ensure that these children continue to have access to these civil servants even when they become secretaries and top officers in other positions.”
While the government has started the programme in Kevadiya, it aims to expand it to other parts of the country in subsequent years.
“We are even creating a portal for this purpose, and while right now only probationers at LBSNAA (Lal Bahadur Shastri National Academy of Administration) are a part of this programme, we will eventually ask all government training academies to adopt it,” another official said.