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JNU Protest: Teachers’ association extends support to students

The JNUTA Teachers’ held a meeting on the campus and unanimously adopted resolution “condemning the brutal police action against peacefully protesting JNU students which severely injured a large number of them”.

Updated on: Nov 12, 2019 08:43 AM IST
New Delhi | By
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The JNU Teachers’ Association (JNUTA) on Monday extended support to the protesting students’ union and demanded the varsity’s vice-chancellor step down. Thousands of Jawaharlal Nehru University (JNU) students clashed with police on Monday as their protest over steep fee hike escalated, leaving HRD Minister Ramesh Pokhriyal ‘Nishank’ stranded for over six hours at the venue of the varsity’s convocation.

Students of JNU protesting against fee hike argue with police personnel outside All India Council For Technical Education during JNU convocation, in New Delhi, India, on Monday, November 11, 2019. (Biplov Bhuyan/HT PHOTO)
Students of JNU protesting against fee hike argue with police personnel outside All India Council For Technical Education during JNU convocation, in New Delhi, India, on Monday, November 11, 2019. (Biplov Bhuyan/HT PHOTO)

The students of the varsity, which has seen several such agitations in the recent years, were protesting outside the All India Council of Technical Education (AICTE) premises, the venue for the varsity’s third convocation, which was addressed by Vice President M Venkaiah Naidu.

The JNUTA Teachers’ held a meeting on the campus and unanimously adopted resolution “condemning the brutal police action against peacefully protesting JNU students which severely injured a large number of them”.

The police has however denied taking any punitive action. They teachers also demanded that the JNU Vice Chancellor “at whose behest this action was undertaken” step down from his position. “The police action was clearly only to defend the obstinate refusal of the Vice Chancellor to engage in any dialogue with students on their concerns,” they said. The JNUTA was of the collective view that the changes in the hostel manual and the steep increase in hostel charges are unacceptable, they said. “It is the University’s responsibility to provide residential and mess facilities to students at reasonable cost and hostels cannot be run on a self-financing principle as the new Hostel Manual proposes,” they said. The students are demanding withdrawal of the draft hostel manual, in which service charges of Rs 1,700 were introduced and the one-time mess security fee, which is refundable, has been hiked from Rs 5,500 to Rs 12,000.

The draft hostel manual also has provisions for dress code and curfew timings, the students’ union alleged, even as the administration denied these two claims.

 
Stay informed with the latest updates on Education News also check CBSE Class 10 Result and Find tips to help you succeed in your academic journey and career planning on Hindustan Times.
Stay informed with the latest updates on Education News also check CBSE Class 10 Result and Find tips to help you succeed in your academic journey and career planning on Hindustan Times.
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