(* A protest meeting on Rohith Vemula was organised in Delhi School of
Economics, Delhi University on 28 th January. Find pasted below a brief
report of the meeting followed by the statement which was read and passed
in the meeting*.)

We, the students of Delhi School of Economics organised a protest meeting
in solidarity with the Joint Action Committee for Social Justice,
University of Hyderabad. It was joined in by students from other
departments of the university as well.

The discussion revolved around the presence of caste based discrimination
within university campuses and the deadly silence on the matter. It was
recognised that Rohith’s investment in progressive politics was crucial in
him and others in Ambedkar Students Association being victimised. And the
present gathering affirmed its investment in that politics and striving for
the kind of change Rohith also aspired for.[image: Inline image 1]

We resolved to continue our struggle against saffronisation of campuses and
the communal, caste-ist and misogynist core of this political project. We
extended our solidarity to the struggles of all marginalised groups and
recognised all these struggles to be interlinked. A passage from DR B R
Ambedkar’s ‘Annihilation of Caste’ was read out to conclude the event.

*We also reaffirmed this statement:*

The suicide of Rohith Vemula, a young research scholar in the University of
Hyderabad, has caused the spilling over of questions that have been
simmering for a long time. It has shown the failure of our institutions in
addressing systems of social power and inequality; in fact what is out in
the open is the way in which these institutions themselves operate and
build upon these systems. Related to this is the question of how
individuals within these institutions experience these inequalities: some
benefitting from them and others suffering within them. In supposed
democratic institutions, like universities, where individuals are ideally
brought together as equals to pursue higher goals of learning and
knowledge, we are in fact divided and placed in hierarchies by imaginary
lines of caste, gender, ‘merit’, etc which are all too real and powerful.

Rohith’s suicide is the most recent in the shameful list of suicides by
Dalit students in institutions of higher education (it is estimated that 18
Dalit students killed themselves between 2007-2011). While many in the
university have never known the feeling of being discriminated against or
excluded, for many others it is what shapes their experience of the
university. Rohith’s suicide raises questions for all us because we
continue to live in and reproduce conditions that made living unbearable
for him. While it is unwarranted to claim to know or judge the reasons for
someone ending her/ his life, the atmosphere at the University of Hyderabad
preceding his death points to an institutionalised targeting of him and his
friends. Rohith’s scholarship had been blocked for months when he and his
friends were suspended by the university on trumped up charges of assault.
Denied entry into public spaces in the university, forced to vacate their
hostel rooms, faced with an institutional boycott: they were not being
punished so much as they were being ‘taught a lesson’. This aggressive
stance of the administration reflects exclusion and boycott which are
essential to the way caste is practised in the most regressive of social
setups- the exact opposite of universities!

In excluding these students, the university administration and certain
political outfits proclaimed them to be ‘anti-national’ because of their
political activism. And after Rohith’s death, the same set of
administrators and political figures are oscillating between ‘feeling the
pain’ to questioning whether he actually was Dalit! Ranged against these
desperate attempts at damage control by university administration and the
government is a tide which has been building up for far too long –Rohith
Vemula was a part of it. If there is anything we know about him, it is the
deep and powerful critique he had of the Hindu nationalist ideology,
communalism and casteism that this government embodies.

While many have expressed their condemnation of the role of the University
of Hyderabad administration and representatives of government, there is
another kind of probing and questioning that we as university students need
to do. Casteism exists not only in its most obvious appearances but also in
its many silent, invisible and everyday forms. As a poet recently remarked,
“The suicide of a Dalit student is not just an individual exit strategy, it
is a shaming of society that has failed him or her”. As students inhabiting
an academic as well as a social space, the experience of caste is reflected
in what we read and research on, how we think of ‘merit’, where we stand on
the question of reservations, who we make friends with, what we make of
others’ backgrounds and if caste is even a question for us.

As a community of students, we are in the thick of a crucial churning. And
we must collectively think and act upon it. The struggle being spearheaded
by the All India Joint Action Committee for Social Justice must be made
stronger against the tide of counter-revolution that is spreading around
us. With this, the demands put forward by the committee are being
reiterated here:

   1. Punish the culprits under the SC/ ST atrocity act.


   - *Bandaru Dattatreya, Union Cabinet Minister of State for Labour and
   Employment.*
   - *Appa Rao, Vice Chancellor (University of Hyderabad)*
   - *Alok Pandey, Chief Proctor*
   - *Susheel Kumar, ABVP President*
   - *Ramchandra Rao, MLC*

2. Remove P. Appa Rao from the post of Vice Chancellor.

3.Sack the MHRD minister Smriti Irani.

4.Introduce and implement Rohith Act that provides legislative protection
to students from marginalised communities in higher education.

5.University of Hyderabad administration must employ a family member of
Rohith Vemula and give his family 50 lakhs as compensation.

6.Drop the false police cases filed on five Dalit research scholars
immediately and unconditionally.

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