http://scroll.in/article/820335/strange-silences-skewed-concerns-the-heartbreaking-disappearance-of-jnu-student-najeeb-ahmed

OPINION

Strange silences, skewed concerns: The heartbreaking disappearance of
JNU student Najeeb Ahmed

The inaction of the police and university authorities is baffling.

11 hours ago
Updated 2 hours ago

Kavita Krishnan

It has been more than two weeks since a student – Najeeb Ahmed –
disappeared from the campus of Jawaharlal Nehru University in the
national capital, following a brutal thrashing and threats at the
hands of a group of students belonging to the Akhil Bharatiya
Vidyarthi Parishad. The thrashing followed an altercation between
Ahmed and an ABVP member, and was witnessed by many including by a
hostel warden.

I say it again. A student vanished from a campus in Delhi after a
thrashing by members of an organisation linked with the ruling party.
This fact in itself is ominous and disturbing. But the response of
authorities and media to it is even more ominous and disturbing.

Surely the JNU administration ought at least to initiate action
against those who were seen beating up Ahmed? But it has not.

Surely the JNU administration should publicly issue a personal appeal
to the missing student, assuring him of safety and due process?
Instead its initial response echoed the ABVP narrative and referred to
Ahmed as “the accused” in the initial altercation. In its latest
bulletin, it has dropped the word “accused”. But this bulletin
mentioned only the initial brawl and the allegation that Ahmed slapped
a student. The bulletin omits even to acknowledge the severe thrashing
of Ahmed by ABVP members in the presence of a warden and many others.

Surely the Delhi Police should have interrogated the students who were
witnessed beating up Ahmed before he disappeared (many of these are
named in the FIR) and checked the records of their calls and messages?

Surely Ahmed’s disappearance should have been a leading human interest
story on all news channels, giving voice to Ahmed’s distraught family
and asking hard questions about facts that the JNU administration and
Delhi Police are seeking to play down or hide? Barring a few
exceptions, the electronic media has ignored the story.

Some questions
A meeting of the warden committee of the concerned hostel on October
16 has recognised that Ahmed was subjected to a brutal assault on
October 14 by a group including students as well as outsiders. The
questions begging to be asked are:

Why, even after an official body of JNU like the warden committee has
taken note of the violence, is the JNU vice chancellor and
administration silent on it?
Why did the JNU administration not file a missing person complaint
with the Delhi Police immediately after Ahmed disappeared?
It would seem that the impulse to shield the assailants weighs more
heavily with the JNU administration than the responsibility to find a
student who went missing after violence. The uncertainty and anxiety
suffered by Ahmed’s mother and sister can only be imagined. Naturally,
they would expect no stone to be left unturned to find the student.
But certain stones are being left resolutely unturned: the university
and police are united in their “no questions asked” policy towards the
persons who beat up Ahmed the night before his disappearance.

Meanwhile, cynically, a toxic narrative is being crafted on social
media and some sections of print media about Ahmed’s disappearance,
building an image of him as a dangerous criminal on the run rather
than a victim of violence whose disappearance is a cause for profound
concern. Dainik Jagran carried a story suggesting mendaciously that
JNU activists Umar Khalid and Anirban Bhattacharya (who had been
charged with sedition in February) have had a hand in hiding Ahmed.

Double standards
This same JNU administration has been extraordinarily quick in
initiating enquiries and action against student activists over
democratic protests, which are a long-cherished tradition of the JNU
student movement.

Take the case of Rama Naga, whom many outside JNU also have come to
recognise as the quiet, good-humoured young man who, as the Jawaharlal
Nehru University Students Union General Secretary, led the Stand With
JNU protests. In July, he was informed by the JNU administration that
there was a complaint against him received on May 7, accusing him of
“blaring loud music” at the Administration Building on May 1. On
September 27, Rama again received a show cause notice from the
proctor’s office about the same event, accusing him of organising an
event by the Ska Vengers and World Sound Power at which “blaring loud
music” had been played. Rama replied, informing the proctor that on
May Day, he had been on a hunger strike at the Administrative Building
against the punishments meted out to JNU students without due process
for the February 9 event. It was not Ska Vengers and World Sound
Power, but another band, Delhi Sultanate, that had voluntarily come to
show their solidarity on May Day.

He pointed out that ABVP also had had a hunger strike at the same
site, where it had a permanent sound system installed and had blared
loud songs night and day. How was it that their sound system playing
for days on end had not disturbed residents but May Day music played
for a few hours had?

Rama received no response, just a summary punishment. On October 21,
an office order from the Proctor’s Office declared that an enquiry had
found Rama guilty of “organising Ska Vengers and World Sound Power”,
and “blaring loud music at night”. The order declared: “This act of
Rama Naga is serious in nature, unbecoming of a student of JNU and
calls for a strict disciplinary action against him.” However “keeping
his career prospects in mind, the Vice Chancellor has taken a somewhat
lenient view of the matter”, and so Rama was asked to pay a hefty fine
of Rs 5,000, and “warned to be careful and not to get involved in such
incidents in future” else “a more stringent disciplinary action will
be taken against him”.

The enquiry failed even to get the name of the band right. Farcically,
by repeatedly referring to the band as Ska Vengers and World Sound
Power, it let slip that its conclusions were pre-scripted.

Effigy burning
On October 4, the JNU administration handed out show cause notices to
Rama Naga and three other students – Abdul Matin, Manikanta and
Praveen – for “effigy burning of Gujarat Government and Gaurakshaks”.

More recently, on October 12, the JNU vice chancellor tweeted about
another effigy burning, this time of the prime minister.

 Follow
 M. Jagadesh Kumar @mamidala90
The effigy burning incident at JNU was brought to our notice. We are
investigating the matter and examing all relevant information.
8:40 PM - 12 Oct 2016
  12 12 Retweets   13 13 likes

This vice chancellor who tweeted promising investigation of an effigy
burning of the prime minister, this administration that has imposed
hefty fines on students for playing music for a couple of hours on May
Day, which has initiated disciplinary action when students burn
effigies of gau rakshaks or the Gujarat government, has failed to hand
out a single show cause notice or initiate an enquiry or disciplinary
action into students who introduced outside elements into a hostel to
publicly beat up a student – even after the victim of the beating then
disappeared.

The conclusion is inescapable. The JNU administration is making it its
job to discipline and punish democratic protests by student activists
against BJP governments at the Centre or states or Sangh outfits,
while looking the other way even when ABVP members indulge in group
violence with dangerous consequences.

ABVP is emboldened
Emboldened by a sense of impunity, ABVP action on campuses is growing.

In July, an activist of the All India Students Association at
Deshbandhu College in Delhi University, Abhinav Kumar was beaten up by
ABVP members so hard that he lost hearing in one ear. Police refused
to file an FIR. Later that month, ABVP activists badly beat up a Sikh
student at Hyderabad Central University, mistaking him for a Kashmiri
student.

In 2015, two activists of Pinjra Tod – a Delhi University-based
feminist collective that challenges sexist rules in women’s hostels –
got calls from an ABVP member, threatening them with sexual abuse and
violence for pasting posters on top of older ABVP posters on DU’s Wall
Of Democracy.

More recently, a Night March organised by Pinjra Tod to assert the
right of women students to be out on the city streets at night, was
attacked by ABVP leaders including former Delhi University Students
Union President Satender Awana. Taunting the activists as women of
loose morals, they brandished a Rs 100 note to suggest that the
activists are sexually available for money.

On October 27, I myself witnessed another such assault by the ABVP,
led by no less than the DUSU president at a public meeting organised
by AISA on The Idea of a University – a meeting held to demand justice
for Najeeb Ahmed and think about the values for which a university
should stand.

Surprisingly, the meeting ended on a note of hope – coming from the
young woman who had been punched by the ABVP leader. In a five-minute
speech to the students who were protesting the police-protected
disruption of the event by the ABVP, Kawalpreet Kaur reminded us that
the university belonged to everyone – including to those who attacked
the public meeting. She expressed the hope that the day would surely
come when universities would not be places where hate and violence
could make a Ahmed disappear; universities would be places where love
would flourish and the free exchange of ideas would thrive.

It is difficult to nourish hope when a student has been missing from a
university campus for so long. Najeeb Ahmed’s fellow students did not
celebrate Diwali on Sunday – instead, they held a Light of Hope vigil
for their friend. Hope lies, perhaps, in raging with all one’s might
against the dying light.

Kawalpreet Kaur after being punched in the face.
Kawalpreet Kaur after being punched in the face.

Kavita Krishnan is Secretary, All India Progressive Women’s
Association, a Polit Bureau member of the Communist Party of India
(Marxist Leninist) and former joint secretary of the Jawaharlal Nehru
University Students Union.


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