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Controversy Over Dalit Students Being Expelled Only Over Anti-Modi Sloganeering

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Image Courtesy: Livemint.com

Expelled students part of anti-Modi sloganeering: Ambedkar University VC R C Sobti to HRD ministry

Amid a simmering controversy over the rustication of eight Dalit students after an alleged assault on a faculty member, the Vice Chancellor to Babasaheb Bhimrao Ambedkar University in Lucknow – Prof R C Sobti has written to the HRD ministry pointing out that the same students were also involved in sloganeering against PM Modi when he visited the varsity in January this year for its 6th Convocation. The Ambedkar University Dalit Students' Union has issued a statement condemning the "bramhinical hegemony and caste based prejudices of the administration" of the University and has said such actions against students "threatens their very existence in the academic spaces which are largely perceived as 'inclusive".

The Economic Times reports that in a status note communicated to the HRD ministry, the VC is learnt to have defended the University's action against the eight students citing repeated offences including that of disrupting the PM's visit with slogans on the Rohith Vemula issue.

Apart from the caste politics that has reared up on campus, there is power politics at play as well with the VC pointing fingers at the University Registrar Sunita Chandra in his communication to HRD. Chandra has said that she had nothing to do with the attack on faculty member Kamal Jaiswal while the VC refused to comment on the matter. The University's spokesperson, Prof Govind Pandey defended the varsity's action. "These students have been expelled earlier also due to unruly activities". This has however been challenged by the students. 

Unfortunately, they belong to one community but there is no caste colour to this. This is simply unruly behavior and goondaism. The VC has set up another committee to examine the issue again and give a fair chance to all the students," Pandey told the Economic Times. Faculty member Kamal Jaiswal -who was assaulted by a group of students on 7th September after a stormy high powered meeting held at the University-has already lodged a FIR.

"There is a larger conspiracy here. This is no Dalit conspiracy either-there are upper caste people also involved and I have named them in the FIR. These students have been used by them", Jaiswal told ET. Meanwhile, sensitivities are running high on the campus with various students organizations andtheir political affiliates taking up the matter. The varsity has banned all protests on campus.

There are also misgivings about some organizations- to which Jaiswal is affiliated- recently going to court challenging special quota provisions at the University. The BBAU is the only Central University admits up to 50 per cent students from the SC/ST community.

 
 

When the Police Uphold the Law, Bengaluru Cops Save Family from Death

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Mohammad Nazir Ahmed, 66, a former Bangalore Development Authority (BDA) official and resident of HSR Layout, along with his wife Naida Khanum and three sons arrived at the farmhouse at around 12.30 am. One son- Mohammad Fateh Ahmed, 24, a student in Australia, had flown in to celebrate Bakrid with his family.

Even as the Ahmedabad police is under attack for its failure to save Mohammad Ayub’s life –he was beaten to death by Cow Vigilantes and succumbed to his injuries on September 16  the Bengaluru rural police saved a Muslim family from getting lynched by activists who gathered at the family's farm house in Begehalli village, Anekal taluk on Wednesday afternoon. The attack was engineered after a family in the neighbourhood "informed" the Cow Vigilantes. The family was committing no offence as the animals being scarificed were bulls, not cows. Yet the hysteria is such in the country today under the new political dispensation, that gangs espousing violence have become emboldened into taking law into their own hands.

In what could have resulted in a Dadri-like killing in which a man belonging to the minority community was murdered by cow vigilantes in Uttar Pradesh, Bengaluru rural police saved a Muslim family from getting lynched by activists who gathered at the family's farm house in Begehalli village, Anekal taluk on the afternoon of September 14.

The family wanted to sacrifice two bulls, a day after Bakrid and distribute the meat among the poor. They were besieged by nearly a hundred vigilantes who claimed they were gaurakshaks from a Hindu outfit. “All the drama began after the family sacrificed the two bulls, until then, the so-called gaurakshaks were wandering around the farm house waiting for the sacrifice to happen,” said a family member.

Mohammad Nazir Ahmed, 66, a former Bangalore Development Authority (BDA) official and resident of HSR Layout, along with his wife Naida Khanum and three sons arrived at the farmhouse at around 12.30 am. One son- Mohammad Fateh Ahmed, 24, a student in Australia, had flown in to celebrate Bakrid with his family. It was the rural police save Muslim family from getting lynched by cow vigilantes, the Deccan Chronicle reported.

According to media reports, it was a Marwadi family residing near the farm house allegedly tipped off the vigilantes about the ‘cow-slaughter’, revealing the nexus between the violent mobs of non state actors calling themselves ‘Gau Rakshaks’ and ordinary citizens. Sensing trouble, Nazir locked his family inside the farmhouse and headed to Bannerghatta police station. “By the time I returned with a police constable, hundreds of people had already trespassed into my property, assaulted my son Fateh and vandalized the car breaking its windshield and window panes,” said Nazir.

The mob allegedly warned the family members locked inside that they would burn down the farm house. “By then, the constable alerted his higher-ups who rushed to the spot,” said Nazir adding, “I and my family members were whisked away to the station leaving my farm house at the mercy of the vigilantes, who brought a JCB, dug a pit inside the farm house and buried the two bulls that were sacrificed.”

“At the police station, a cow-slaughter case was registered though I showed them photographs of the two bulls we sacrificed. I even told the station house officer to exhume the carcasses of the bulls to examine if they were cows,” said Nazir adding he was aware of the law.

The family members were made to sit at the police station from 2.30 pm until about 11.00 pm on Wednesday as the vigilantes had gathered outside the station and were waiting for them to come out to take their photograph and hand it over to the media.

Bannerghatta police officials stated that there was large number of vigilantes at the farm house on Wednesday and in the aftermath of the Cauvery row violence, they were short-staffed. “All what we had in mind was to protect the family by bringing them to the police station,” said Murali, sub-inspector, Bannerghatta police station. Nazir is now contemplating filing a police complaint against those who assaulted his son.