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Swarajya Staff
Apr 09, 2019, 12:29 PM | Updated 12:29 PM IST
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After stirring up a controversy, the Kerala Public Service Commission (KPSC) has decided to omit the question regarding the entry of young women in Sabarimala, which appeared in an examination 3 April, reports Times of India.
How pathetic is the Hindu status co in Kerala. PSC question on the woman below 50 years who entered Sabarimala temple for the first time. Hindus, if you have any self esteem left, never vote for â¦@cpimspeakâ© pic.twitter.com/WdLY3qm6Ta
— Jayasree Nair (@jayasreenair1) April 6, 2019
“Who were the first women to have entered the Sabarimala Ayyappa temple as per the Supreme Court ruling?” was a question appeared in an in the online exam for the appointment of Assistant Professor (Psychiatry) for medical education department held on 3 April.
The multiple he multiple choice question had options (a) Bindu Thankam Kalyani, CS Libi (b) Bindu Ammini, Kanakadurga (c) Sasiakala, Sobha (d) Surya Devarchana, Parvathi..
The answer key indicated option (b) as the correct answers, while the other options had the names of activists who tried to enter Sabarimala post the 28 September verdict and the name of Hindu Aikyavedi state president Sasikala as well as BJP state general secretary Shobha Surendran as well.
Following a massive backlash from social media, the PSC decided to pull back the question. It has also recommended action against the person who had prepared the question paper which featured the controversial question.
Bindu Ammini and Kanaka Durga had entered the Sabarimala Ayyappa temple on 2 January following the 28 September Supreme Court verdict that set aside the centuries-old tradition of restricting women belonging to the age group of 10 and 50 from entering the temple sanctum.
Bindu, hailing from Koyilandy in Kozhikode district, and Kanaka, from Malappuram district in Kerala, entered the sanctum sanctorum at 3.45 am.