Bengaluru (PTI): Karnataka Chief Minister Siddaramaiah on Tuesday said that his government's mission is to make Karnataka the Skill Capital of India and a USD 1 trillion economy by 2032, powered by "talent, technology, and tenacity".
He said the state has set ambitious goals to skill 3 million youth by 2032, raise women's enrolment in ITIs to 33 per cent, double skilling capacity at the district level, and strengthen global placement linkages through the International Migration Centre-Karnataka (IMC-K).
Speaking at the inauguration of the Bengaluru Skill Summit 2025 here, Siddaramaiah said, "We are bringing institutional innovation to governance with the Karnataka Skill Intelligence and Strategy Unit (KSISU) for data-driven decision-making, District Skill Committees for local convergence, and the Chief Minister's Fellowship to accelerate on-ground implementation."
He said the state will deepen partnerships with industry, integrate skills into every stage of education, and build a culture of lifelong learning so that "every Kannadiga is job-ready, entrepreneur-ready, and future-ready".
Highlighting Karnataka's role as a leader in skill development, Siddaramaiah said the state was among the first in India to set up a dedicated Department of Skill Development, Entrepreneurship and Livelihood in 2016-17.
"This was not a bureaucratic move; it was a visionary step to unify all skill initiatives under one umbrella, with one mission: to make Karnataka the Skill Capital of India," he said.
Under the Chief Minister Kaushalya Karnataka Yojana (CMKKY), he said the government "took skills to every corner of the state", exceeding its target of training five lakh youth.
Since 2023, Siddaramaiah said, the government has reframed Karnataka's skilling strategy to align with the demands of a changing global economy.
He recalled announcing the Karnataka Skill Development Policy 2025-32 in the Budget, and said with the inauguration of the Bengaluru Skill Summit 2025, that vision is taking shape.
"This seven-year strategic blueprint, backed by an outlay of Rs 4,432 crore, aims to position Karnataka as a global hub for a skilled, inclusive and future-ready workforce," he said.
He noted that Karnataka stood second in the India Skills competition with 48 medals and secured four medals at the World Skills championship. The government will also establish a Skill University in Sandur, he added.
The Bengaluru Skill Summit 2025, themed "Workforce 2030: Scale, Systems, Synergy," aims to position Karnataka as the "Skills Gateway to the World" with a focus on ESDM, AI/ML, aerospace, green energy, inclusion and international employability.
Siddaramaiah said Karnataka continues to be a frontrunner in economic growth, with a GSDP of Rs 28.1 lakh crore in 2024-25 and a growth rate of 10 per cent, contributing 8.9 per cent to India's GDP. The state's per capita income of Rs 3,80,906 is nearly 90 per cent higher than the national average, he added.
He said Karnataka's labour force participation rate stands at 57 per cent, with unemployment at just 2.4 per cent. Women's participation is 43.5 per cent in rural areas and 28.8 per cent in urban areas.
"These numbers are not mere statistics, they represent lives transformed, families uplifted, and communities strengthened. They represent a Karnataka that believes in inclusive and sustainable growth," the chief minister said.
He added that every skilled worker -- from the precision tool operator in Tumakuru to the artisan in Mysuru and the farmer in Mandya using drones -- are "the silent contributors to Karnataka's progress".
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Thiruvananthapuram (PTI): Kerala Chief Minister Pinarayi Vijayan on Friday paid homage to Mahatma Gandhi on his 78th death anniversary and claimed that the Sangh Parivar was still afraid of him and his memory and that is why his name was removed from the rural employment guarantee scheme.
Vijayan, in a Facebook post, said that Gandhi was killed because of his uncompromising stance on secularism and his vision of a pluralistic India that embraces diversity and disagreement.
He claimed that the Sangh Parivar was afraid of the memory of the Father of the Nation and hence his name was removed from the Mahatma Gandhi National Rural Employment Guarantee Scheme.
"Why are they still afraid of Gandhiji? The answer is simple. Gandhiji's life and vision are the exact opposite of the politics of hatred and alienation envisioned by the Sangh Parivar," the CM contended.
He further claimed that the Sangh Parivar was trying to remove Gandhi from the lives of the ordinary people.
Vijayan said that unity in diversity was "the foundation stone of the Indian Republic" and everyone should be committed to protecting it from the "totalitarian tendencies that suppress dissent".
He claimed that there were certain forces which were trying to "rewrite history and elevate communal murderers as heroes" in order to lead the country towards totalitarianism.
The Marxist veteran said that Gandhi was "not assassinated by a man named Godse, but by an embodiment of the politics of hatred promoted by the Sangh Parivar" which is still trying to attack and destroy the Constitution and the democratic values of the country.
He said that Gandhi's martyrdom was a constant call for the anti-communal struggle.
Leader of Opposition in the state assembly V D Satheesan too claimed that the Sangh Parivar was afraid of Gandhi.
In his message on Facebook paying tribute to the Father of the Nation, Satheesan said that Sangh Parivar was even afraid of the memories of Gandhi and that is why they were "erasing books and writings" to hide things from people.
He too said that the assassin of Gandhi was not just a man, but an ideology.
Satheesan said that even though the Sangh Parivar shot him down, Gandhi still lives on after his death.
Gandhi, the most prominent face of India's freedom movement, was assassinated by Nathuram Godse on this day in 1948.
