http://www.thecitizen.in/index.php/NewsDetail/index/1/11819/Indias-Students-Face-Brunt-of-BJP-Wrath-As-Resistance-Gathers-Pace-in-Varsities

Monday, September 25, 2017

India’s Students Face Brunt of BJP Wrath As Resistance Gathers Pace in
Varsities

THE CITIZEN EDITORIAL

Sunday, September 24,2017

The very first action by the Modi government when it came to power was
against students in Jawaharlal Nehru University where the full might of the
state was evident in trying to crack the Left bastion, and arrest and jail
student leaders. Accompanied by violence, even at the Patiala courts where
lawyers beat up students and journalists, the effort was to break the
resistance and ensure the virtual takeover of the campus by the BJP
students wing, Akhil Bhartiya Vidyarthi Parishad (ABVP). The students,
starting with former JNUSU President Kanhaiya Kumar who faced the brunt of
BJP/ABVP ire, have fought back refusing to be cowed down. And even though
life has become a struggle for the progressive students and faculty of JNU
since, with daily issues inviting daily protests, the recent victory of the
United Left that captured the Students Union has been a landmark of sorts.
As despite the odds, laced with threats, the students of the University
rejected the ABVP that has been visibly aggressive in this campus over the
past three years. A case in point being scholar Najeeb Ahmad who
disappeared---it is almost a year now since he has been missing---after an
altercation with ABVP students.

Delhi University has, despite the money and the support, moved away from
the ABVP to the Congress students wing, National Students Union of India
(NSUI) in the recent students union elections. NSUI bagged the two top
posts, despite the aggressive presence of the ABVP in the campus, stirring
the pot as it were on almost every possible issue-- be it the screening of
a documentary film, or a seminar or literary event as in Ramjas College
earlier this year. This victory by NSUI registered a clear disapproval of
ABVP violence and goondaism by the students, a major setback for the ABVP
in an University it regards as its own.

Before the DUSU elections, were two other significant ABVP defeats in
Rajasthan University where the students wing has been very active under the
protection of the BJP state government. The presidents post was won by a
ABVP rebel and the general secretary and vice president by the NSUI. And
this after again aggressive and in your face posturing by the ABVP. It also
lost the students union polls in Punjab University with the top three
positions bagged by the NSUI.

But spectacular has been its defeat in Hyderabad Central University
where---as in JNU---the full might of state power was used to curtail the
aftermath of Dalit scholar Rohith Vemula’s sucide. In what became a
prolonged battle with students taking to the streets of Hyderabad and
Delhi, the centre rejigged the university administration (again as in JNU)
to gain control of the campus. ABVP came into its own as it were, with any
number of muscle flexing incidents being reported. But in this electoral
test, the students of HCU have rejected the ABVP to embrace the CPI(M)
backed Students Federation of India and Ambedkar Students Association led
coalition ‘Alliance for Social Justice’. This alternative defeated both the
ABVP and the NSUI, in HCU as the United Left did in JNU.

The crackdown on the protesting students in Banaras Hindu University by a
state government that has no respect for dissent was thus, to be expected.
The police force stormed into the University campus, thrashed the students
and left several injured. For BHU authorities the protest demanding
security for girl students, and arrest of culprits who had molested a
student, was “anti national”. But if the objective was to silence the
students with fear this has not worked. As almost immediately a major
protest against the attack was held in Lucknow, addressed by the young and
the old both. More are being planned in Adityanath land but also in Delhi
and other parts of India.

The BJP that had come to power using force to quell dissent in campuses now
is coming up against a wall of resistance. The ABVP that has been empowered
across campuses to smell out dissent, and crush it with the help of the
authorities---including varsity administrations, the parent party, the
state dispensation, and hence the police---finds the ground slipping. And
now the BJP has no real idea how to quell dissent that has moved from the
campus of JNU into most other Universities as the recent wave of students
union elections indicates. This is apparent from the attack on the BHU
students, but instead of fear the BJP/ABVP is being confronted by growing
and fast spreading anger against the attack.

The students as a community are coming together against what most of them
have the intelligence and the foresight to recognise as an assault on
democratic India. BJP that had thought of ridding campuses of progressive
discussion and debate with fear and police action, finds the resistance
buildng. The ABVP has actually accelerated unity and solidarity amongst the
student groups as has been seen in the JNU and HCU elections where larger
coalitions contested and won the polls.

The BJP clearly is left without any ideas of how to tackle the student
community. Dialogue is alien to its method of functioning, and as a young
student said, “it is their way, or the highway.” This inability to mend
bridges, and concede demands, was evident yet again in BHU where the police
was brought into the campus by the VC clearly under instructions. The very
fact that the protest took place, that it attracted a sufficient number of
students, and that it resisted efforts to break the unity is an indication
of the growing anger in campuses even such as BHU has been perceived as a
loyal BJP bastion.


-- 
Peace Is Doable

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