---------- Forwarded message ----------
From: Tanya Matthan <tanyamatt...@gmail.com>
Date: 6 July 2010 09:22
Subject: Fwd: RESIST FORCED EVICTION OF STUDENTS IN THE NAME OF COMMONWEALTH
GAMES
To: Ayesha Matthan <ayeshamatt...@gmail.com>, yasmin matthan <
ymatt...@hotmail.com>, Arun Matthan <arunmatt...@yahoo.co.in>, anoop kumar <
anoopkh...@gmail.com>, CHITTIBABU PADAVALA <afchittib...@gmail.com>, Bindu
Menon <binme...@gmail.com>, lalit batra <lalitba...@gmail.com>,
bhamat...@gmail.com, bendan...@gmail.com, Deepti Mehrotra <
deept...@gmail.com>, Vidyun Sabhaney <vidyunsabha...@gmail.com>




Please do read this and pass this on to as many people as possible.


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Down with eviction of students from College Hostels!
Onwards to students self-activity!!

The current administration of Delhi University has attempted to reshape the
University through a series of sinister agendas - be it the introduction of
semester system, the European Studies Programme or the biometric
identification system. All of them have shared one thing in common:
the thwarting of democratic debate on proposals for change, and the routine
violation of regulatory protocols.

The latest episode has been the eviction of students (2,000 students
according to reports) from a number of hostels in Delhi University in order
to make them available for the Commonwealth Games. Hostels are being
renovated and beautified for the officials and visitors of the Games,
while students are scrambling around for their own accommodation. The
students, like the 40,000 families on the Yamuna bank, are now among the
many that have been displaced in the name of national glory. What comes into
question is the fact that the University has agreed to avail of 20
crores of rupees from the Commonwealth Games project without taking any
cognisance of how and where such resources are generated. It has thus become
an accomplice in the larger process of reckless corporatisation that the
whole city is undergoing in the bid of becoming a “global city”.

This has left students at the mercy of private accommodation, with its
unregulated rents and precarious guarantees. Rents are rising in
anticipation of the increased demand for PGs and flats, forcing many
existing residents to move out and making accommodation unaffordable for
incoming residents as well. The University has made no attempt to devise a
mechanism to control or subsidise rents. The inflated prices that students
pay are in effect the costs they bear for the cosmetic surgery DU is
undergoing, and by extension, the hidden burden they carry for the
Commonwealth Games. Some newspaper reports even indicate that hostel fees
may increase after the hostels have been “upgraded”. Moreover, the lack of a
viable and safe alternative has compelled many girls seeking admission in DU
to rethink their decision. The University has also failed to consider living
conditions around campus, especially from a gender-sensitive perspective. We
can only begin to imagine what it must be like for those with physical
disabilities to navigate around dug-up roads, unmarked holes and hazardous
construction material.

The students are told that their eviction is “for their own good”. It is
“for them” that the authorities are “improving student infrastructure”,
making “world-class” hostels. Where was this concern for well-being when the
college authorities took the decision to evict students? Not once was there
any dialogue with students about this “upgradation”, or about the best and
most suitable way to go about it. Instead, the whole decision-making process
was shrouded in mystery, leading to utter chaos and confusion: while Hansraj
made its hostel residents sign a bond last year declaring they had no
objection to being evicted between July and October 2010, Miranda House
students have still not been officially informed about the eviction!

We cannot allow the University to get away with such deliberate and
avoidable irresponsibility. We
make the following demands from the University:
• We demand the provision of alternate accommodation for evicted students.
• This accommodation should be at par with the hostels, both in terms of
prices as well as
qualitative conditions such as basic amenities and safety.
• We also demand, as conscientious members of a larger community, that this
provision not be met at the cost of another section of society.

On our part, let us work towards creating another space, a commune perhaps,
an imaginative and practical alternative that is self-governed by members of
the university community, a cooperative living space that meets its own
needs and conducts itself in a responsible and
democratic fashion.

If you are angered by what you see around you in the University, and indeed,
in the city, if you want to speak out against the shrinking of democratic
space and are ready to reclaim what is rightfully yours, please come and
join us!

THIS IS OUR UNIVERSITY! LET’S SPEAK OUT!!
University Community for Democracy
Contact: cwgresista...@gmail.com * Malay 9871924612 * Naina 9313356046 *
Praveen 9911078111

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