|  As the number of people in the world swell to 8 billion , the  jobs are shrinking just as fast. Every ten minutes 2,500 people lose their  jobs. The chances of children born today getting employment are very bleak.  Every government has to grapple with this problem. In order to prove that the  jobs exist but there are no people to fill them we keep inventing higher and  higher degrees that they need to have - first it was a BA, then MA , then B Ed,  then Phd, now it is MBA. However no matter what the degree level is , it is  largely irrelevant because the basic education offering of our colleges have  not changed in 50 years except to add  Information Technology and  Astrology. Arts has History/Geography/Literature/Sociology and Political  Science etc and Sciences has Physics, Chemistry/Biology and that completely  useless subject Zoology. Most of these subjects create teachers to teach  these subjects.
  But the needs of India  have changed. The path of the economy has changed, the number of poeple have  increased a hundred times, the land holdings have dwindled, our farmers have  exhausted the green revolution and bled it white, pesticides have killed off  most of the productivity, thousands of species of animal and plant have  disappeared making life much difficult, water has disappeared , the weather is  far more variable, the attitude of the village is no longer that of bucolic  contentment....education has to be changed to deal with all these new problems,  new desires. We have the largest number of schools in the world - how many  people have benefitted from them ? We need to teach new subjects - if not at  the school then at the college level.  I marvel that a country that is totally dependant on animals and  which could live in royal splendour if we realised how to work with them has no  educational systems to train people to deal with them. Here are some facts        31   Veterinary  Colleges. Main education : insemination of cattle. Syllabus updated: 1930.       No municipal plans to deal with  animals. No foresters trained in tree identification or planting only in  cutting forests down. The entire forest department gets les than 0.5% of the  national budget.             No wildlife doctors in India. No zoo cadre. No bird  doctors. No monkey experts. No deer or elephant experts. No tiger doctors. No  scholarships to study abroad to specialise in needed subjects. No insurance  schemes for animals. No consideration of their role in the economy as  transporters and fuel savers, pesticide and fertiliser providers or even  garbage cleaners.  No slaughterhouse management  No design of yokes. No animal carts designed with load bearing  systems. 40% of bullocks die of neck cancer in 3 years  No rethinking on pesticides and correlating them with the money  that is spent in hospitals.  No evaluation of cancers caused by meat eating inspite of  hundreds of studies of Indian origin  No enforcement of laws on situating meatshops or licencing them.  No of illegal meat shops in Delhi  alone : 11,000  No economic evaluation of the leather and meat export industry  and its correlation with the money spent on cleaning rivers and replanting  areas denuded by goats.  No veterinary centres in the district. No veterinary doctors.  This inspite of the fact that 70% of all rural bankruptcy is caused by the  death of an animal for which the loan has been taken.  No green economic plan which puts a cost on each animal's  services.  No evaluation of what tourists come to India to see  and a building up of those resources. Instead all the money is put into hotels.  No evaluation of waterbodies   No laws to protect animals of any consequence  No training on how to catch a single animal or even to use  anesthesia  No education , no specialist training , nothing. So then how do  you solve the problems of nilgais, monkeys, panthers and dogs : by killing. You  kill and kill till the animal is almost extinct - as in the case of the   panther - and then you spend all your money in rebreeding them. This is what  has happened to the vulture whose disappearance has resulted in crores now  having to be put into village cleaning of carcasses.  How do you deal with the disappearance of trees that are only  spread by birds who have now become almost extinct ? How do you treat horses so  that they live longer and transport more people ? Why should India use all her fertile land in Madhya Pradesh  to grow soyabeans to feed Europe's animals ?  Where should the offal from the slaughterhouses be dumped ? In the freshwater  lakes as Al Kabeer does in Patancheru ? In the Jamuna - as Idgah does in Delhi ? In the Ganga - as Kanpur does ?  How do you create new technologies - alternative leather , as China  has done . How you teach women to cook with gobar and not choke on the methane  fumes - because there is no way that India's villages will ever depend  on gas. We need a generation of trained professionals who will  gradually move into all the spheres of India's policy making and make India's  governance pro farmer, pro poor, pro health - and all these depends on people  realising and dealing with our dependence on animals.
  Which is why I designed and built a university for animal  welfare and related subjects in Faruidabad in 2002 . The building is spread on  8 acres in Faridabad  and the staffing permission was given government approval . In the beginning  the staff was to come from abroad – and top professors of Oxford,  Cambridge and  Yale had agreed. UNEP had given a library grant. 43 courses of animal  management had been designed. Deemed University permission was on the anvil.  These are the subjects that were to be taught: Biology, chemistry, physiology, anatomy etc, ecology and  conservation, animal nutrition and laws, animal nursing, animal economic,  housing, city animal management, water and forest management, commercial  factory, slaughterhouse ,zoo  and laboratory management, rebreeding,  aquatic management, engineering and new technologies, organic farming, bird  care, monkey, elephant, snake , small animal and livestock management,  veterinary pharmacy and drug dispensation etc.  The BA was to take 4 years but there are courses for 1 and 2  years as well. Apart from that there are short courses for police, municipal  officials etc.  The University called NIAW ( National Institute for Animal  Welfare ) would have  changed hundreds of attitudes. Once upon a time the  law colleges in India  were not only bad but law courses were taken very lightly. Once the Bangalore Law  School came up it became a benchmark  and every Law College or Law Department immediately  pulled up its socks. This is what I expected to happen with veterinary colleges  to begin with.  How would these graduates get jobs ? How will they not ?   City management, wildlife, laboratories, hospitals, shelters, NGOs,  slaughterhouses, zoos, veterinary centres, municipalities, industry....... not  to mention the hundreds of consultancies all over the world.   62 universities in the world are running courses on animal  welfare . Each one of them was contacted and they were delighted and happy to  help. Many people had already started to try and get international funding so  that they can come and teach here till our own staff was trained. Books for the  course ? The Education Ministry has already put a team from its EDCIL to design  all the course books.  If this had come up everyone who wants to go into animal welfare  could get a proper degree. There are thousands of jobs in each sector that need  this kind of trained person.   However I was removed from my job in 2002. The NIAW was handed  over to the Environment Ministry and  put into cold storage for 3 years by  the NDA government. Then Amity and other large universities offered to take it  over and in order to avoid giving it, the Ministry for Environment started TWO  DAY courses for government officials on “ compassion”. This was expanded to  three days on animal laws – to teach the lowest rung of officials in ministries  like steel and coal. Now they have held , in 6 years , 40 such nonsensical  programmes and the magnificent structure is beginning to come apart for lack of  maintenance. There is no staff, these “ courses” have been taught by joint  secretaries in the ministry who know as much about animal welfare and laws as I  do about triple theorems. The money allocated for this educational institution  is returned to the general budget every year. Every appeal of mine to hand it  over even to their own Animal Welfare Board of India so that they can turn it  into a centre of learning falls on deaf ears.   How many other wonderful opportunities do governments simply lay  waste to because our bureaucrats are so greedy , lazy and averse to new ideas  that might help India.   In these last 6 years we would have , by now , turned out specialists that  would have been able to save tigers, butterflies and the rest of India.   To join the animal welfare movement contact gandhim@nic.in    previous 
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