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Mumbai: High Court hands school for underprivileged a ray of hope

The Robert Money technical high school and junior college saw several protests following a controversial agreement entered into by its landowners

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The court order will come into effect from January 1, 2020

The court order will come into effect from January 1, 2020

The Christian Reform United People Association (CRUPA), which has been fighting to keep the 180-year-old Robert Money school for underprivileged children on Friday saw the Bombay High Court pass an interim order directing Chankya Gyan Kendra — a public charitable trust, to pay the Court Receiver (Court appointed receivers to take custody, manage, and preserve money) R33 lakh per month as a 'royalty' starting from January 1, 2020.

The Robert Money technical high school and junior college saw several protests following a controversial agreement entered into by its landowners — the Bombay Diocesan Trust Association (BDTA) and the governing institution of the school, the Bombay Diocesan Society (BDS) — with Chankya Gyan Kendra.

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