KISS to run centres in two other states & Bangladesh

KISS to run centres in two other states & Bangladesh
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Highlights

The Kalinga Institute of Social Sciences KISS that provides free education from kindergarten to postgraduation to 50,000 tribal students in Odisha, on Sunday said it would run similar centres in other states and Bangladesh

Kolkata: The Kalinga Institute of Social Sciences (KISS) that provides free education from kindergarten to post-graduation to 50,000 tribal students in Odisha, on Sunday said it would run similar centres in other states and Bangladesh.

A KISS centre for poor children is expected to start functioning at Kolkata from 2020, its founder Achyuta Samanta said here on Sunday.

The KISS has entered into an agreement with a Kolkata based NGO to run the centre for 1000 poor children in the metropolis from the academic session of 2020, he said. Bhumi Pujan has already taken place at Joka area and construction going on at a faster pace.

Declared a Deemed to be University by the Union Human Resource Development ministry in August 2018, the KISS would start a centre near Ranchi in Jharkhand from 2020.

Jharkhand cabinet has already approved 28 acre of land for the KISS campus, Samanta, a Rajya Sabha member from the ruling Biju Janata Dal (BJD) said.

The KISS that runs a centre for 600 street children in Delhi also has plans to open such centres in Bihar and Chattissgarh, he said.

To a question, Samanta said he has met Bihar Chief Minister Nitish Kumar twice and is waiting for his government to provide land for the KISS centre.

The institute also has plans to start two KISS centres in Bangladesh. One will come up for girls of class 1 to 10 in Jassore and another for boys at Dhaka, he added.

The Jassore centre will be set up in partnership with an NGO and the Dhaka centre with a private university of Bangladesh, he said adding both the centres are expected to start from 2020.

Founded in Bhubaneswar in 1992-93 to wean away tribals from naxal influence in Odisha, the KISS has 27,000 students and 23,000 of its alumni stay in its facilities.

"The KISS provides poor tribal students free food, lodging and education from KG to PG. We also provide them jobs after completion of education," Samanta said.

Asked about sourcing of funds to run such a mammoth institution, Samanta said a portion it comes from the turnover of the Kalinga Institute of Industrial Technology (KIIT), another institute set up by Samanta, and contribution from employees, sale of products made by KISS students of vocational courses and donation.

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