JNU Teachers Allege Faculty Member Suspended to Cover up Financial Fraud, Protect Vice-Chancellor

The matter had been in knowledge of the administration since May 2021, and no member of the JNU executive council was allowed to see even a single page of the fact-finding committee report, they claimed.

New Delhi: The Jawaharlal Nehru University Teachers’ Association (JNUTA) on October 11, Monday accused the varsity administration led by vice-chancellor (VC) M. Jagadesh Kumar of covering up a case of alleged misappropriation of research funds.

It claimed that the suspension of a faculty member on charges of financial embezzlement of over Rs 88 lakh was “orchestrated” by the vice-chancellor to hide his own “inaction” and the true scale of financial irregularities.

In a statement, the JNUTA claimed that on September 30, an emergency meeting of the university’s executive council (EC) had decided to suspend a professor and two officials and initiate criminal proceedings against them for alleged misappropriation of funds.

According to the Telegraph, they also alleged that the matter came up as an “additional agenda” and was not allowed to be discussed thoroughly in the EC meeting.

The daily reported that A.L. Ramanathan, professor with the School of Environmental Sciences of the university, allegedly raised bills beyond the sanctioned amount for certain research projects. The additional expenditure amounted to Rs 88 lakh. The varsity finance officials released the amount from the consolidated research funds. Varsity finance officer Samir Sharma was relieved from his post last week, over two years ahead of completion of his tenure.

The teachers told PTI that university’s finance officers are appointed from the Indian Audit and Accounts Services but from 2017 till date, the people serving as finance officers have no experience or expertise on the matter.

Also read: A Better Fighting Chance? How JNU Students Are Viewing Kanhaiya Kumar’s Shift to Congress

The financial irregularities were brought to light by a fact-finding committee, which was constituted on July 7.  The teachers alleged that the irregularities had been in the knowledge of the administration since at least May 2021 or even earlier, and the matter was also discussed in the finance committee meeting on July 6. Thereafter a fact-finding committee was set up.

They claimed that no member of the JNU EC was allowed to see even a single page of the fact-finding committee report.

JNUTA secretary Moushumi Basu told the newspaper: “This mode allegedly involves procuring false bills of consumables from actual or shadow vendors, getting them approved, and pocketing of the payment made for the same by all those involved without anything being received in exchange by the university/project.”

The Telegraph also reached out to Ramanathan but he declined to comment on the matter.

“Ideally, when there is a case of financial bungling of this nature, an enquiry is set up by the university. The accused persons are issued chargesheets and the enquiry committee recommends actions. The enquiry can widen the investigation too. But in this case, the decision was taken to send the case to the chief vigilance officer without any discussion in the EC,” Mazumdar told the daily.

The association alleged that the move to relieve the finance officer should have been discussed in the EC meeting; however, it was not done to protect him and the vice-chancellor.

According to D.K. Lobiyal, former JNUTA president, bills of over Rs 2.5 lakh are sent to the vice-chancellor for clearance. “It is not clear how many bills were approved by the vice-chancellor. Hence a proper enquiry is required at the level of the university,” he told the daily.

The newspaper emailed a query to VC Kumar on the matter and awaiting his response.

(With PTI inputs)

JNU Profs Allege ‘Gross’ Irregularities in New Hiring, Seek President’s Intervention

Seven candidates had been hired in October but the professors have alleged that none of them have the requisite experience and qualifications for their respective positions.

New Delhi: On November 23, eight professors of Jawaharlal Nehru University’s School of Physical Sciences wrote a letter to the president of India alleging irregularities in recent faculty recruitment at the department – especially that the vice-chancellor was admitting people of “questionable credentials”.

The eight professors are Sanjay Puri, S.S.W. Murthy, Subhasis Ghosh, Sankar Prasad Das, Subir Kumar Sarkar, Brijesh Kumar, Satyavrata Patnaik and Debashish Ghoshal. A copy of the letter is available to view here.

‘Gross violation of ethics’

The letter, addressed to President Ram Nath Kovind and copied to JNU vice-chancellor M. Jagadesh Kumar and chancellor V.K. Saraswat, alleged “violations” in the recruitment process in October.

Seven candidates had been hired in the month but the professors have alleged that none of these people have the requisite experience and qualifications for their respective positions. In one case, the letter said, a candidate selected to be associate professor post hadn’t even been shortlisted by the selection committee, as is required.

The eight went on to request President Kovind to intervene in his capacity as visitor to the university. They also asked that “the appointments mentioned be kept in abeyance until all aspects of the conduct and outcome of the selection process (including whether the best available candidates were selected and whether the external subject experts on the selection committee were qualified to meaningfully judge the quality of research in the relevant areas of specialisation) are scrutinised by a committee of leading physicists and astrophysicists.”

On November 25, two days after the letter was sent to the president, it was forwarded to the university’s 290th Executive Council meeting.

According to the eight professors, Jagadesh Kumar has had trouble following the university’s hiring process since he took over as VC in 2016.

Before this incident, students and professors at the university had demanded Kumar’s resignation after a group of armed people affiliated with the Akhil Bharatiya Vidyarthi Parishad (ABVP) roamed around campus with sticks and rods beating up students in January this year. There had been numerous allegations that Kumar had allowed the violence.

The ABVP is a national students’ organisation connected to the Rashtriya Swayamsevak Sangh.

JNU VC M Jagadesh Kumar. Photo: PTI

Politically motivated

One of the letter’s authors said on condition of anonymity that Kumar’s activities at the university aren’t episodic but part of a larger scheme.

“Since the VC is from a science background, we thought he wouldn’t have wanted the science department to suffer academically, but it turned out to be false,” he told The Wire. “There is a larger design … controlled from elsewhere to target JNU further” – an allusion to the government’s repeated attempts to malign the university, starting with the 2016 ‘sedition’ row.

He also said recruitments at the university have been politically motivated and are in truth a way to populate the university with people who will toe the Bharatiya Janata Party government’s line and not ask questions.

He added that one of the experts in the selection committee, the director of the Inter University Accelerator Centre, is under investigation for plagiarism charges. In interviews to the Mathematics department, the following week, a professor of electrical engineering from IIT Kharagpur was called in as an expert, he said.

Moushumi Basu, secretary of the JNU Teachers’ Association, concurred, adding that a considerable number of people who had been recruited to teaching positions in the last few years have had ties with the ABVP.

She also echoed the unnamed professor’s belief – that Kumar’s actions together amount to an attempt to dismantle the university’s basic structure.

Kumar didn’t respond to requests for comment from The Wire. This article will be updated as and when he replies.

Basu said the Teachers’ Association plans to bring out a larger report after the new problem has been resolved. “This is the first time the school [of physical sciences] has spoken out, which is a very big thing,” Basu added. “We will definitely take it forward in a more consolidated manner – maybe a public enquiry.”

Around 100 MPs Will Write to President Demanding Sacking of JNU VC: Yechury

JNU VC M. Jagadesh Kumar has been under fire for not doing enough when students and faculty were brutally attacked by a masked mob on the campus on Sunday evening.

New Delhi: CPI(M) leader Sitaram Yechury on Tuesday said around 100 MPs will write a letter to President Ram Nath Kovind demanding the sacking of the Jawaharlal Nehru University (JNU) vice-chancellor (VC).

He was addressing a public meeting organised by the teachers’ association and students’ union of the university.

Also read: CAA Protests: Journalists Take Out Rally Against Mistreatment by Law Enforcement

“Many members of Parliament, around 100 of them, have been contacted and they have decided to write a letter to the President, who is the visitor to the university, demanding the sacking of the VC,” Yechury said.

His words received a loud cheer from students.

Under fire from students and faculty members for not doing enough when they were brutally attacked by a masked mob on the campus on Sunday evening, JNU VC M Jagadesh Kumar urged the students on Tuesday to put the past behind them and return to the university premises.

The Battle for JNU’s Soul

The administrative regime is simply following the government’s policy of rampant privatisation of public resources. Such a process is anti-democratic in its imagination and punitive in approach.

Jawaharlal Nehru University (JNU) is now in a new phase of life. Known as ‘comply or perish’ to us insiders, not a day passes without the administration issuing some circular demanding “compliance” from the faculty or students of the university.

Since most of these demands range from the absurd to the counterproductive, like enforcing students and faculty attendance or arbitrarily rescheduling the academic calendar, most do not comply. Often the faculty, after protracted discussions in the general body meetings of the teachers association, resorts to different modes of protesting this compliance enforcement raj. These protests are then promptly followed by threats and punitive action meant to “discipline” the ‘non-compliant’ – much in the fashion of bullies and thugs. These range from petty and vindictive methods – like docking leave and not processing medical papers – to issuing legal instruments like show-cause notices.

Legal threats are usually issued to just a few, perhaps with the aim of frightening the many. More importantly, issuing more than 150 notices at any given time also exposes the well-known fact that most in the university are opposed to the administration and find laughable the constant threat of disciplinary action against those who refuse to cow down. Those not in JNU or any other university in the country do not immediately understand what is being undertaken here.

Also read: I Was Forced to Quit JNU After Being Denied Salary for Ten Months

Some even wonder why the JNU faculty and students seem to continuously be in protest mode. There are two ways of responding to this. Let’s begin with the counterfactual.

Why did the university not witness this kind of anti-administration protest prior to February 2016? The answer is simple: because such anti-academic and anti-university measures had never been attempted by the administration prior to 2016. The present VC and his administrative coterie are not simply undoing every functioning structure of JNU, they are vandalising the idea of the university.

Here, the second reason to understand JNU’s protests becomes important. The faculty has consistently stated that the changes being made to the university’s structure are not only unnecessary, but also in repeated violation of ordinances and the very Act of parliament that created it. The ongoing protests demonstrate the present administration’s consummate disregard for democratic procedures and well-established conventions, which is deeply injurious to every aspect of the university.

These involve, among other things:

  1. An attack on the admission process (from reducing numbers of students admitted, dismantling the Constitutionally mandated affirmative action policies, or replacing excellent systems of entrance-tests designed to gauge research potential with laughable models of ‘multiple choice questions’);
  2. Drastically reducing funds to the university’s library, so much so that there may be no electronic resources available, come January;
  3. Reducing discussions to a farce in the statutory academic bodies of the university, like the Committees for Advanced Study and Research, Board of Studies and the Academic Council;
  4. A steady interference in all institutional matters, like the appointments of chairs, deans, and the recruitment process.

The space and freedom to teach, research and write in peace –  the very essences of university life – have all been severely jeopardised by such administrative vandalism.

Why has the JNU administration steadily harassed faculty and students?

Why are the demands – be it marking of daily attendance (soon to be biometric) or online entrance examinations, followed by threats and punishments exemplifying the worst kinds of managerial practices?

The answer, once again, is obvious. Privatising a public university requires that its very character be changed completely. JNU was created as a research university in 1970, and has always maintained a very special character. It has provided a very high standard of higher education to students from different regions of India, belonging to any social or economic strata, at minimal cost.

The decades following its creation saw at least two kinds of developments in the university. One was a very high quality of research output, both of the faculty and of young researchers. This also helped in creating many generations of teachers who are presently employed in colleges and universities in India and abroad.

The other was an organic emergence of an extraordinary university culture that synthesised the intellectual and the political – enabling students not only to find their feet as scholars, but also articulate their selfhood as citizens. Students in JNU have historically debated everything from American imperialism, the many failures of the Indian state, to what the university itself ought to be.

The ability to knit this criticality into the very fibre of the university, by creating a space for student engagement in institutional processes (through department level student-faculty committees, or students union representation in boards of study or the Academic Council meetings), is what made JNU a truly democratic university.

Also read: For Sake of Protecting the Idea of a University, JNU Teachers Must Rise

The new tightly-managed and privatised university will not have space for any of this. We can already get glimpses of this in numerous such universities that have mushroomed all over the country. At the outset, they have a prohibitive fee structure that will keep out hundreds of brilliant, though poor and marginalised students, for whom higher education will become unaffordable.

Even ordinary middle class families will not be able to afford such an education. Besides, many new private universities have a biometric attendance system in place; they also do not permit any of its members – faculty, students or the non-teaching staff – to form unions. Contract structures are also beginning to reflect how the private is different from the public – at its most worrying, differential pay scales are being put in place – which will eventually create salary-driven divisions between colleagues appointed at the same level. This will also occur between Indians and non-Indian faculty.

The carrot usually dangled in front of the faculty is that they will have the space to create their own courses. For those of us quite used to doing so for decades in a public university like JNU, the stick that accompanies this privilege seems more like a police baton.

Inherent violence in government-led privatisation of public resources

The present administrative regime is simply following the current government’s policy of rampant privatisation of public resources. Such a process is perforce managerial and anti-democratic in its imagination. The JNU instance makes clear that compliance enforcement and punitive measures are knitted into its very approach.

The only unexpected element in this is how JNU’s university community – its students and faculty – have resisted all attempts at this wanton destruction of a nationally important public institution. They have not succumbed to the management’s speak of becoming “stakeholders”; they know what the stakes are, and continue to fight back as a community of scholars.

The battle for JNU’s survival matters not only to those who work or study there – it has grave implications for the intellectual and political future of the country. Public higher education is a democratic right of all Indians. It is precisely for this reason that all who care about India’s future, and wish to make it safe from ugly corporatisation or bigoted cultural agendas, must fight for the survival of the public university.

Arunima G. is professor at the Centre for Women’s Studies, JNU.

JNU Students’ Union Alleges Varsity Hiked Fees for Basic Documentation

“This hike is coming at a time when the VC has renovated his office with Rs 9 lakh,” the student body said in a statement.

New Delhi: The Jawaharlal Nehru Students’ Union (JNUSU) alleged on Monday that the administration has hiked fees for basic documentation like collecting no dues, degrees and migration certificates.

In its Academic Council meeting in October, the varsity had approved a proposal to hike fees for collecting no dues, degree certificates, migration, mark sheets, duplicate copies of certificates, an official from the varsity said.

The JNU administration in a unilateral imposition of its anti-student policies has now doubled the fees for basic documentation, the students’ union said.

Also Read: Future of JNU Could Be at Stake as Teachers, VC Headed for a Battle

It is unfortunate that from the time M. Jagadesh Kumar took over as the VC, JNU is seeing privatisation, commercialisation and corporatisation of public spaces, they added.

“This hike is coming at a time when the VC has renovated his office with Rs 9 lakh, renovated his home with laying of new fences and brought three new vehicles for the administration. This fee hike should immediately be taken back or else the VC will get a befitting reply from the JNU community,” the JNUSU said in a statement.

They said that they were not called for the Academic Council meeting.

Amid Political Interference and Obsession With Ranking, Our Academic Culture is in Serious Trouble

We need a new awakening – a movement to be initiated by eager students and concerned teachers to restore the spirit of education and create a vibrant culture of learning.

Recently, a student of mine who teaches at a central university expressed his anguish. “Except meaningful teaching and research”, as he said, ” everything else is important – uploading the attendance register of students, organising programmes like Swachh Bharat Abhiyan or surgical strike day, and sending the video to the concerned authority as a proof of our loyalty”. Another student who teaches at a college in Delhi University faces something similar. “Sir, where is the time for study? It seems that the only thing we have to do is prepare and produce the documents – often with the art of packaging – for showcasing the department in front of the NAAC committee.”  

Meanwhile, the vice-chancellor of a central university in Bihar has been alleged to have falsified his academic achievements. Also, in one of the most celebrated universities in the country, a Hindutva activist has been appointed as a visiting professor while professor Ramachandra Guha has had to say ‘no’ to Ahmedabad University because the RSS student-wing, as it is reported, does not want this ‘anti-national’ historian to teach at Ahmadabad.

Amid this absurdity and pathology, all sorts of ‘experts’ (and everyone – from the section officer in the ministry to the businessman with dubious records – can target teachers for their ‘laziness’ and ‘inefficiency’, and this seems to be the favourite pastime of the Indian middle-class always oriented to the ‘efficiency’ of the West) would complain that we are nowhere because our universities do not get good ‘ranking’.

Also read: How JNU Administration is Scuttling Reservation and Academic Freedom

With the booming business of private universities (I am not including the exceptions) as education shops and ‘troubled’ public universities like HCU, JNU, Jadavpur, Aligarh and Manipur, we find ourselves in an academic culture that deteriorates every moment with wrong priorities, degradation of the vocation of teaching, political interference in the appointment of vice-chancellors, the techno-managerial practice of documenting and measuring everything – from attendance to lesson plan, from fund-raising projects to placement history and the obsession with ranking affecting severely the self-perception of an institution.

This must change. Possibly, we need a new awakening – a movement to be initiated by eager students and concerned teachers to restore the spirit of education and create a vibrant culture of learning. However, this needs honest contemplation and reflection.

We, the teachers

To begin with, I must admit that not everything is good with us. With empty classrooms, demotivated students, disinterested teachers, shallow curriculum, routinisation of exams as ceremonies of certification and mass distribution of degrees, many of our colleges/universities remind us of something that is fundamentally wrong with higher education. It is also true that as teachers, many of us have failed to do our jobs meaningfully. With bad and non-inspiring teaching, using ‘notes’ and ‘guidebooks’ (these days, Google) and blaming students continually for our own lack of interest in critical pedagogy, we are no less responsible for the growth of a negative perception about the teaching community.

However, at a deeper level, the problem lies somewhere else. As a society, we have not yet learnt to give dignity to the vocation of teaching and the realm of education. Is it the reason why at the moment of his arrival, the most ‘powerful’ prime minister did not think twice before choosing someone known not for her work in the field of education, but primarily for her performance in a popular soap opera as the human resource development minister?

Furthermore, be it the feudal obsession with the ‘official’/ ‘administrative’ power (the imagery of a ‘district collector’ surrounded by hundreds of constables), the market-induced urge for ‘lucrative’ careers (the MBA phenomenon), or the gendered discourse that distinguishes non-glamorous ‘soft’/ ‘feminine’ teaching from the glitz of ‘hard’/ ‘masculine’/’ professional’ work (the matrimonial columns reveal this hierarchy so sharply) – the reasons for the degradation of the vocation of teaching are many. In the hierarchy of occupations, teaching – even university teaching – is not seen to be as good as the job a techno-manager, a banker or even an income tax inspector does.

New Delhi: Jawaharlal Nehru University (JNU) Vice-Chancellor M. Jagadesh Kumar coming out of his office at JNU on Thursday after being gheraoed by students protesting over missing varsity student Najeeb Ahmed. Credit: PTI (PTI10_20_2016_000287B)

Our universities need to be emancipated from politically appointed vice-chancellors. Credit: PTI

The consequences of this harsh reality are obvious. See the way teachers are treated. Talk to guest lecturers or ad-hoc teachers in Delhi (at times, even ‘smart’ students crack jokes on them) or see the way a private university compels a junior teacher to function essentially as a clerk (recently, as I was told, a young teacher in a private university left her job because she could not bear it anymore as the management told her to bring new students and earn some extra money – the way an insurance agent finds new clients and earns more for it). Even in a ‘privileged’ university, one hardly gets adequate infrastructure (imagine how finance officers and accountants make you run even for spending Rs 1000 – the money allotted per year for buying the stationary) for doing one’s work more meaningfully. Is it the reason why for many youngsters, teaching as a vocation is not their first choice? It seems we are caught into a vicious circle. While our lack of enthusiasm diminishes the dignity of the vocation, society as a whole further reproduces it by hierarchising, differentiating and stigmatising us .’Good’ salary, no work – that is the stereotype.

Again, the educational scenario has further degenerated because of undue political interference. Its worst manifestation can be seen in the appointment of the vice-chancellors. It is despairing that as a nation we seem to have expertise in the skill of destroying our universities by choosing the vice-chancellors (once again, I am not speaking of the remarkable exceptions) who are by no means great educators in tune with fundamental sciences, liberal arts and social context of learning.

Also read: Jawaharlal Nehru University – We are Dying, Mr. Vice-Chancellor

Instead, socio-political networking, affiliation with the ruling regime, sycophancy and proximity with power characterise them. As a result, two things happen which cause great damage to the academic culture. First, they tend to suffer from terrible inferiority complex. As they cannot relate to good teachers, great historians or mathematicians, involved professors and committed academicians, they seek to hide this sense of loss through the exercise of arbitrary power – interfering in the selection committee, erecting a wall of separation between the administrators and students/teachers, dividing the teaching community by generating the fear of victimisation, and above all, destroying the higher objectives of university life because of their loyalty to the ruling regime.

Second, as the leadership suffers from legitimisation crisis, the culture of the university becomes toxic, the quality of teaching/research suffers and with the taboo on creative/pedagogic dissent, mediocrity is reinforced. Speak less of good books, vibrant classes and good research. Instead, feel happy in doing election duty, organising the state-directed programmes and clapping as the VC hoists the national flag and preaches nationalism. Bad vice-chancellors, it seems, are determined murderers of the spirit of higher education.

Ranking for what, for whom?

Not solely that. In the age of competitiveness, quantification, foreign universities as reference points and the middle-class striving for ‘recognition’ from the ‘international’ forum, another disease has inflicted the academic culture – the disease of ranking. As I raise my voice against this obsession with ranking (ten ‘best’ universities, ten ‘centres of eminence’, ten’ top’ colleges – almost like ten top beauty queens), I do not wish to be misunderstood. I am not saying that quality is unimportant, nor am I saying that expansion of horizon, or learning from others, or critical self-evaluation is irrelevant. I am saying something else.

First, there is no uniform/standardised scale of ranking because each institution, depending on its historical and social location, has its unique mission. To take a simple, yet revealing illustration, a university like JNU cannot and should not be compared with a university in the first world precisely because here our task is qualitatively different – bringing higher education closer to many first-generation learners from the marginalised sections of a terribly divided society, evolving a point of mediation between vernacular traditions and knowledge disseminated through English, and bringing the university closer to the specific needs of the local community.

Also read: Autonomy in Higher Education, a Trojan Horse for Privatisation

As a teacher, if I succeed in tapping the linguistic/cultural capital of a tribal student from Jharkhand, create an enabling environment for her to get the best from the university and give it back to her community, I would think that I have done a good work, even if it does not help my university get a ranking on the basis of a standard defined by others. Likewise, if, for instance, a leading IIT insulates itself from people’s needs by producing engineers and technologists more suited for the American market rather than our unique conditions, its good international ranking, I would not hesitate to say, does not prove anything.

As a society, we have not yet learnt to give dignity to the vocation of teaching and the realm of education. Credit: Facebook

Second, with our obsession with ranking, we often fail to ask a deeper and uncomfortable question: Does the knowledge we produce and feel proud of to get this ranking really liberate us? Why is it that despite the presence of top ranking universities filled with the galaxy of Nobel laureates in the US, it remains the most violent nation in the world in terms of its military conquest and invasion of other territories? Or why is it that despite Oxford and Cambridge, the British engaged in the violent practice of colonising the world? Or why was it that the scientists and engineers from the best universities in Hitler’s Germany were involved with the holocaust? In this context, I often feel that my schoolteacher – an unknown person in an unknown school – who inspired me to see sunrise and sunset with wonder and understand both poetry and science – was God’s gift to me. I do not bother to know his bio-data or ‘ranking’.

Third, the obsession with ranking has generated chronic self-doubt amongst us, and instead of working on ourselves, we are either living with wounded consciousness or continually trying to defeat others. If Miranda House gets a higher ranking than LSR, what should an LSR teacher do? Or if Amity gets a better ranking than Jadavpur, is the latter really bad? Should it start another placement cell, construct a golf garden, use a hell lot of money for advertising on a television channel, ask its professors to get more projects? Working according to one’s unique mission, working honestly, evolving and blooming naturally – these silent and intense practices of academic life become secondary, instead, the ‘projection of achievements’ and ‘self-advertisement’ become the major focus for charming the agencies that rank and hierarchise us.

No, we need not shed tears for ‘poor ranking’. Instead, we should concentrate on something deep and fundamental. It is important to respect teachers, trust their autonomy, understand the specificity of the vocation and create a socio-economic environment that encourages young/vibrant/creative minds to join the vocation.

We need more teachers with self-dignity, not contractual labourers with perpetual insecurity. Likewise, we ought to rethink ‘knowledge’ – its deeper socio-political/epistemological/existential meaning, and its relationship with social history and people’s aspirations. We need to free our universities from mindless techno-bureaucrats who understand only the language of uniformity (same curriculum, same exam, same MCQ); we need to appreciate the beauty of diversity and creative openness – say, inviting poets (even without NET or PhD) as visiting professors of literature, urging the likes of Medha Patkar to teach a course on social movement, abolishing the highly oppressive and non-reflexive examination like NET for recruiting teachers, establishing a sustained relationship between the university and the local community, and appreciating the fundamental truth that not everything about academic life is for measurement, publication in journals with high ‘impact factor’ and ranking.

And finally, our universities need to be emancipated from politically appointed vice-chancellors. When those who are essentially against the higher ideal of education begin to dictate the terms, darkness descends. Everything falls apart.

Avijit Pathak is a professor of Sociology at JNU.

JNU Teachers Body Initiates Public Inquiry Against Vice Chancellor

The JNU Teachers Association set a three-day deadline for the vice chancellor M. Jagadesh Kumar to submit his defence.

The JNU Teachers Association set a three-day deadline for the vice chancellor M. Jagadesh Kumar to submit his defence.

JNU VC M. Jagadesh Kumar. Credit: Twitter

New Delhi: For the first time in Jawaharlal Nehru University, its teachers association today called for a public inquiry against vice chancellor (VC) M. Jagadesh Kumar for allegedly violating various conventions of the university.

The teachers body, exercising its powers under the JNU Teachers Association (JNUTA) constitution, set a three-day deadline for the VC to submit his defence and state if he would appear for hearings in person or through a representative.

“In exercise of powers in JNUTA constitution, the association proposes to hold a public inquiry against the VC for various violations. He is also given time till October 20 to submit a written statement in his defence,” JNUTA president Ayesha Kidwai said in a release.

Kidwai said the hearings will take place at 5 pm from October 23-27.

The teachers body, exercising its powers under the JNU Teachers Association (JNUTA) constitution, set a three-day deadline for the VC to submit his defence. Credit: JNUTA

“If the VC fails to acknowledge or fails to appear, the hearings will be held ex-parte,” the statement said.

JNUTA listed charges against the VC and asked him to specifically deny or admit each charge.

Some of the allegations included undermining the integrity of faculty selection process, violation of reservation policy, harassing teachers and denying their legitimate dues, undermining sexual harassment watchdog GSCASH and callous attitude in missing student Najeeb’s case.

Legal experts and eminent citizens were expected to chair the hearings and issue a judgement.

The VC did not respond when contacted for a reaction on the the JNUTA statement.

JNU VC Wants to Display Army Tank as Reminder of ‘Great Sacrifices’ of Soldiers

“We will create a situation where people will love the nation. And if they don’t, we will force them to love it,” the head of Veterans India has said.

“We will create a situation where people will love the nation. And if they don’t, we will force them to love it,” the head of Veterans India has said.

The JNU administrative block. Credit: Facebook

The JNU administrative block. Credit: Facebook

New Delhi: Nearly a year after Jawaharlal Nehru University (JNU) hosted a freedom run and a flag-hoisting ceremony along with a ‘patriotic’ singing competition to mark Independence Day, a fresh wave of patriotism has engulfed the university – this time with plans to display a military tank in the campus to help instil among students a “love for the army”.

According to an Indian Express report, during the July 23 celebration of Kargil Vijay Diwas – which began with a tricolour march – JNU vice chancellor M. Jagadesh Kumar requested Union ministers Dharmendra Pradhan and V.K. Singh to help the university procure a tank to remind students of the “great sacrifices and valour of the Indian army”.

The event also featured performances by the army band and the felicitation of women family members of soldiers who died in the 1999 war.

Commending the university for the event, B.K. Mishra, head of Veterans India, which helped organise it, said: “We will create a situation where people will love the nation. And if they don’t, we will force them to love it.”

While Kumar termed the programme as “historic,” according to a Times of India report, Pradhan said he was surprised by the change in the environment of the university – which last year was the epicentre of a controversy over alleged anti-national slogans and where now slogans of ‘Bharat Mata ki jai’ were being raised.

Crediting the vice chancellor for proclaiming “victory over JNU,” retired Indian army officer G.D. Bakshi added that there were several other “forts like Jadavpur and Hyderabad university which our army will capture.” 

According to Indian Express, addressing the audience, cricketer Gautam Gambhir referenced controversies surrounding freedom of expression in the university and around the human shield in Kashmir, saying that while freedom of speech was essential, there were certain things that were “absolutely non-negotiable” – like respect for the tricolour.

“People said that the decision [to tie a Kashmiri man to the front of a military vehicle to deter stone-pelters] taken by Major [Leetul] Gogoi in Kashmir was very wrong, but I always maintained that people who are in extreme conditions should have all the right to protect themselves, their men and the country,” he said.