http://scroll.in/article/819563/lock-in-of-jnu-vice-chancellor-ends-but-protests-over-missing-student-threaten-to-get-bigger

STUDENT PROTESTS

Lock-in of JNU vice chancellor ends, but protests over missing student
threaten to get bigger

Campus remains tense after student union decision to release top
administration officials. Other groups threaten to take over the
agitation.

Yesterday · 10:37 pm
Updated Yesterday · 10:38 pm

Abhishek Dey

A tense stand-off at Jawaharlal Nehru University in Delhi over a
missing student came to an end on Thursday with the students releasing
top officials, including the vice chancellor, after a 24-hour lock-in
protest.

But the campus remained on edge as the Jawaharlal Nehru University
Students’ Union president Mohit Pandey insisted, “We have not ended
the protest. We have just ended the gherao to take the protest to a
higher level.”

Adding to tensions, other student bodies criticised Pandey’s decision
to let the officials go and threatened to take over the protests. Many
even suggested that the protests could be conducted without the
participation of the All India Students Association and the Student
Federation of India, which control the student union through an
alliance.

The university has witnessed controversies all year, starting with the
Afzal Guru commemorative protest in February that led to arrest of
Kanhaiya Kumar, who was then and others on sedition charges.

The latest trouble comes in the wake of the disappearance of
27-year-old Najeeb Ahmad, a post-doctoral student of biotechnology,
who was last seen in a brawl with activists of the right-wing Akhil
Bharatiya Vidyarthi Parishad at his hostel room on Saturday morning.
His disappearance – his family claims he has been abducted – has
became a bigger issue after political outfits on campus attached
communal overtones to the incident.

Vice chancellor released
The decision on a lock-in protest was taken by the Jawaharlal Nehru
University Students’ Union along with various other organisations,
alleging inaction in finding Ahmad, whom the administration initially
referred to as an “accused" in the brawl.

Over the course of the 24 hours, Vice Chancellor Mamidala Jagadesh
Kumar appealed to the students to end the lock-in and invited them to
a discussion. He also told the media that if the protestors tried to
stop him from attending an academic council meeting on Thursday
afternoon, he would call the police.

Administration officials alleged that outsiders were creating trouble
on campus. "We are concerned that certain outside elements and
miscreants are trying to politicise and communalise the issue and
create law and order problems,” they said in an appeal put online on
Thursday morning. “We again appeal to you to stop this illegal and
unlawful agitation and go back to your respective classes and
hostels."

Pandey, however, insisted the student action was entirely legal. “We
have not illegally confined anybody," he said, before the protest
ended. "The officers are free to come out of the building but they
must answer our questions.”

The stand-off ended after Pandey was summoned to the vice chancellor’s
office, shortly after which the official was seen walking out of the
administration building.

Students divided
Outside, agitated students yelled “shame on JNUSU”. Later, the other
groups – excluding the All India Students Association-Student
Federation of India combine – met to discuss ways to take the protest
forward.

“We want Najeeb back... and it seems our student union is not
interested in that,” said Dawa Sherpa of the extreme Left Democratic
Students Union. “Without consulting any other group involved in the
protest, they negotiated with the vice chancellor. We will now form a
committee and exclude the AISA-SFI.”

Lata Sarang of the Hundred Flowers Group, which conducts classes on
Marxism inside and outside the JNU campus, said, “This is a movement
of the common student, not JNUSU. So the common students will now have
to take it further.”

Her views were echoed by Alam Hussain, a third-year undergraduate
student in the School of Languages, who was sitting in the crowd. He
said, “You [the student’s union] do your own politics and let the
common students fight their own battle.”

He added, “Justice for Najeeb is a battle of the common student. This
movement has no such leader. We shall have to mobilise and decide a
course of action.”

A post-graduate student, who did not want to be identified, said time
was running out. “We still do not know if Najeeb is safe,” he said.
“Under such circumstances, the campus should not function normally but
the JNU students union has just ended the fight here.”

Defending the union’s stand, its former general secretary and All
India Students Association office bearer, Rama Naga, said what it had
done was not end the protest but change its form to make it more
effective.

“The gherao was ended because the administration was not paying
attention to the students’ demands,” he said. “But the movement is
being taken to a bigger level with a change of form. We waited for six
days, held several meeting with top university officials and even the
police, but have they taken any action against the perpetrators? So
tomorrow, the students union shall march to the Home Ministry.”

Police action
The Delhi Police, on their part, set up a special team on Thursday to
investigate Ahmad’s disappearance. “An eyewitness has reported having
seen Najeeb Ahmad leaving the hostel in an autorickshaw on Saturday
morning,” said Additional Deputy Commissioner of Police (South
District) Nupur Prasad.

The police have so far registered a case of abduction on a complaint
by Ahmad’s mother and a non-cognisable report on the basis of a
complaint by Akhil Bharatiya Vidyarthi Parishad member Vikrant Kumar,
who claims Ahmad slapped him when he went to his hostel room to
campaign for the mess election. No first information report has been
filed in connection with the assault on Ahmad.


-- 
Peace Is Doable

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