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          Patna, Nov 8 (IANS) Bihar's six government-run engineering   colleges have fewer than 40 teachers, including principals, to cater to over   4,000 students, triggering resentment among them and forcing thousands of others   to study in other states.
          
 
 |  The acute shortage of teachers in six colleges can be gauged from the fact that   there are over 300 vacancies for teachers, according to college   authorities.
 
 Principals of all six engineering colleges say they have   been managing everything with the help of guest faculty members, but repeated   protests and hunger strikes in recent months by students to highlight their   plight belie the claims.
 
 Students of these colleges in Bihar are   regretting their decision to stay and study in their own state, given the acute   shortage of teachers that badly hit laboratory and workshop   activities.
 
 "I simply curse my fate for opting to stay back in Bihar,   instead of going outside to study engineering like thousands of other students   from the state," said Surya Prakash, a fourth year student of the engineering   college in Motihari.
 
 "We will be passing engineering without doing   anything in the lab or workshop," he said.
 
 Rajesh Kumar, another student   of the same college, expressed similar sentiments.
 
 "I was selected for   three engineering colleges in West Bengal, Karnataka and Orissa but decided to   stay in Bihar. It was a blunder on my part," he said.
 
 The two are among   thousands of engineering students who are unhappy with lack of facilities,   including shortage of teachers and unavailability of basic infrastructure in six   engineering colleges.
 
 The problem is long-standing.
 
 Last year, the   Nitish Kumar government was embarrassed when the opposition raised the issue   that polytechnic faculty have been deputed as teachers for taking classes in the   four new engineering colleges opened four years ago by the   government.
 
 However, the officials concerned downplay the   problems.
 
 "We manage everything with the help of a guest faculty," said   S.N. Ojha, principal of the Motihari Engineering College.
 
 The college has   only seven permanent teachers to teach its 750 students.
 
 The Chandi   engineering college also has only seven teachers, and the same situation   persists in the Gaya and Darbhanga engineering colleges also, according to   college authorities.
 
 "Students have been completing engineering courses   virtually without lab and workshop work in Motihari and Chandi. Sometimes, the   students were taken to other colleges for lab work," admitted a senior official   of the state science and technology department, which oversees the engineering   colleges.
 
 Angry over the pathetic condition of engineering colleges and   the government's apathy in resolving the issues, the students of four new   engineering colleges, set up by the Nitish Kumar government, began an indefinite   hunger strike in Patna Oct 18.
 
 The students, however, called off their   protest following the government's assurances to provide them the necessary   facilities in their engineering colleges.
 
 According to an estimate, more   than 200,000 students from Bihar have been stydying in engineering colleges,   both government and private, outside the state, including the Indian Institutes   of Technology (IITs), the National Institutes of Technology (NITs) and in   hundreds of other colleges in Bangalore, Chennai, New Delhi, Pune, Bhubaneswar,   Bhopal, Jaipur and even those in Imphal and Srinagar.
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