Supriyo was attending an event organised by the ABVP when his supporters ended up heckling students who resisted his presence on the campus.
Kolkata: Jadavpur University (JU) in West Bengal witnessed an unprecedented unrest on Thursday evening (September 19) following an incident where a section of the students allegedly “heckled” Babul Supriyo, the Union minister of state for environment, forest and climate change.
Supriyo was attending an event organised by Akhil Bharatiya Vidyarthi Parishad (ABVP) – hitherto an absent student body in the history of student politics within the campus – when he was shown black flags and asked to leave by the agitating students.
The situation escalated when Supriyo, refusing budge, responded to the agitation with threats of his own. A few hours after the impasse, he was rescued by West Bengal governor Jagdeep Dhankhar, who is also the chancellor of the university; but not before some associated with the ABVP and the BJP started a fire, vandalised the Arts Faculty Students’ Union, the UG Arts building and a few shops in and around Gate no. 4 of the university.
They also beat up some students who were found bleeding profusely near the site of violence.
“This started because the ABVP had called for a programme here today with Babul Supriyo, Agnimitra Paul and other BJP leaders who have been notorious for their propaganda – provoking riots and such in the last couple of years. In light of this, the JU student body does not believe that there is space for this fascist propaganda here (on the campus) and if they choose to come to this place and poison young minds, [then] as is our democratic right, we will choose to resist that on all fronts,” said Shounak Mukhopadhyay, a post-graduate student at the Film Studies department.
Jadavpur university student injured at the protest site. Image credit: Jitsoma Banerjee.
He further said: “Babul Supriyo and his guards have abused our students, actually hit the students and generally provoked many other responses that are being depicted in the media as mayhem being caused by the students. We will not stand for this and he must apologise for provoking the students and bringing in arms into an educational institution.”
Soon after Supriyo entered the seminar, a magazine loaded with bullets was found near the entrance – which was later claimed by his guards. Supriyo repeatedly urged the vice-chancellor Suranjan Das to call the police. He let his guards manhandle students and faculty alike and asked the media to take pictures of the students so they could be rusticated later.
Students protesting at Jadavpur University. Image credit: Jitsoma Banerjee.
Meanwhile, Das said that he will not let the police enter the campus. In 2014, his predecessor had faced massive student ire by letting police enter the campus.
The vice chancellor and other senior officials of the campus eventually fell sick and were admitted to a south Kolkata hospital.
Students have refuted claims that the attack on Supriyo was pre-planned and insisted on presenting a united front under the Arts Faculty Students’ Union (AFSU), Faculty of Engineering and Technology Students’ Union (FETSU) and Science Faculty Students’ Union (SFSU) – all elected student bodies having mixed representation from within the campus.
“We decry the AISA-SFI-TMCP divide that the media is trying to impose on us. We were protesting as general students who do not want token fascists walking our campus grounds. Babul Supriyo’s brand of politics includes provoking and highlighting reactions that show his opposition in poor light. He did not make faces at us or threaten us or hit us back while the cameras were rolling. He has done this before and we are calling him out for it. The BJP supporters are condemning the “attack” on him while circulating a photograph of him elbowing a female student, all in the same breath. This is shameful but nothing new coming from the representative of a government that depends more on divide rather than unity,” said another student who wished to remain anonymous.
The violence that was unleashed as an aftermath of the impasse shocked even the supporters of the right-wing organisation within the campus. While a political agitation is not a new occurrence at the university, physical violence and vandalism are.
“I am a supporter of the BJP, but that doesn’t mean I will support this kind of vandalism in my own campus…There are lots of ideological difference between us and them…but still I am a student of Jadavpur University first… I strongly stand with the university and my friends who were beaten by the goons…#Shame…In spite of being anti leftist, not a single person has made me feel uncomfortable inside the campus ever…Which might not have been possible if it is something other than JU..”, Aniket Mazumdar posted on Facebook.
Trinamool Congress’ secretary general and education minister Partha Chatterjee called the incident “unfortunate and shocking”. He said that the governor paid no heed to the state government’s request for additional time to control the situation despite chief minister Mamata Banerjee’s plea and that his actions reeked of “partisan approach.”
“Nobody has come out of this [incident] untarnished. I strongly condemn the attempt of ABVP activists to storm the university grounds and go on a rampage against unarmed students. But at the same time, the way in which our students were behaving with Babul Supriyo and the governor of the state is not something that does them any good. The media can see the way both parties behaved – two wrongs don’t make a right. This is not the end [of the matter] I fear,” said Samantak Das, professor of comparative literature and a member of the Jadavpur University Teacher’s Association.
Professor Das was also caught in the crossfire when he came to assess the situation on the ground.
Jitsoma Banerjee is a postgraduate student of Comparative Literature at Jadavpur University
Featured image credit: Jitsoma Banerjee