<p>Nepal said on Monday that it was banning secondary schools from using names like “Oxbridge”, “White House” and “NASA” over fears that the education system is losing its Nepali culture.<br /><br /></p>.<p>The announcement follows a series of protests by student and youth groups — sometimes violent — outside schools across the country which have chosen foreign names.<br /><br />“We have informed the schools to change their name to Nepali. This is clearly written in the laws but several schools were found violating them,” education ministry spokesman Janardan Nepal said.<br /><br />“They will be given enough time to change the names. But it should not take long,” Nepal said, without specifying a deadline.<br /><br />Nepal depends on foreign governments and aid agencies for around 25 per cent of its 65-billion-rupee ($715 million) education budget and cash-strapped schools often try to attract funding and pupils with “prestigious” western names.<br /><br />An estimated 250 secondary schools in Kathmandu are named after European and US historical figures, institutions and places, such as “Einstein Academy” and “Pentagon College.”<br /><br />Last month the United Nations voiced “deep concern” over escalating violence against schools in Nepal by militants it said were endangering children’s lives and jeopardising their right to education.<br /><br />Local media have blamed student wings of various political factions for destroying computers in a Kathmandu college and torching school buses in the capital, the southern district of Chitwan and the eastern city of Dharan.<br /></p>
<p>Nepal said on Monday that it was banning secondary schools from using names like “Oxbridge”, “White House” and “NASA” over fears that the education system is losing its Nepali culture.<br /><br /></p>.<p>The announcement follows a series of protests by student and youth groups — sometimes violent — outside schools across the country which have chosen foreign names.<br /><br />“We have informed the schools to change their name to Nepali. This is clearly written in the laws but several schools were found violating them,” education ministry spokesman Janardan Nepal said.<br /><br />“They will be given enough time to change the names. But it should not take long,” Nepal said, without specifying a deadline.<br /><br />Nepal depends on foreign governments and aid agencies for around 25 per cent of its 65-billion-rupee ($715 million) education budget and cash-strapped schools often try to attract funding and pupils with “prestigious” western names.<br /><br />An estimated 250 secondary schools in Kathmandu are named after European and US historical figures, institutions and places, such as “Einstein Academy” and “Pentagon College.”<br /><br />Last month the United Nations voiced “deep concern” over escalating violence against schools in Nepal by militants it said were endangering children’s lives and jeopardising their right to education.<br /><br />Local media have blamed student wings of various political factions for destroying computers in a Kathmandu college and torching school buses in the capital, the southern district of Chitwan and the eastern city of Dharan.<br /></p>