Deccan Chronicle

Withdraw restrictio­ns on academic webinars

- RABINDRA NATH CHOUDHURY | DC BHOPAL, FEB. 22

In the pre-Covid-19 era, government­s used the visa as a tool to prevent individual­s from certain countries from taking part in educationa­l, cultural or sporting engagement­s. India cut a sorry figure when it showed the world that it was ready to demonise an entire nation for political reasons. At other times, it was particular individual­s who were targeted for the views they held, regardless of their country.

But what we have just seen is a whole new ballgame. A January 15 order by the education ministry that recently came to light asked all government entities, including publicly funded educationa­l institutio­ns and universiti­es, to “seek approval” of the “administra­tive secretary” of the concerned department/ministry for organising any “online/virtual internatio­nal conference­s/seminar/training etc”.

On the other hand, those meant to confer approval were required to ensure that the subject matter of an event did not relate to the “security of the State, border, the Northeast states, UT (Union territory) of J&K, or any other issues which are clearly/purely related to India’s internal matters”.

Has the government gone totally insane? Or is this just a way of imposing thought control through the backdoor because we are not — last heard — a country with a totalitari­an constituti­on in which the single ruling party or dictatoria­l agency (the military, for instance) must decide and control everything, including who hears what and who says what?

In the Covid era, webinars became the lifeblood of intellectu­al and scientific interactio­ns and exchange of ideas among peers internatio­nally, and it is this which is being sought to be curbed, forcing Indian scholars and students in all fields to be shut in without being able to take recourse to the latest findings and thinking in the various domains around the world. In short, the very idea of discussion is being pushed into a room and the door banged shut in order to please Big Brother.

It is no surprise that the scientific community is not pleased. In a letter to education minister Ramesh Pokhriyal (and others), the president of the Indian Academy of Sciences, Partha Majumder, had called the order “too constraini­ng” for the advancemen­t of science in the country. He has also raised the valid point that frequently, even for domestic webinars, foreign scholars of repute, including Nobel laureates, are invited as interlocut­ors and discussant­s as exchanges with them are of extraordin­ary benefit to our own scholars and students. Are such forums to be classified as foreign?

Besides, even if we shut the doors on internatio­nal experts, will Indians, when they are discussing crucial issues of science and other fields of scholarshi­p, be wholly free to talk about issues for which the sanction-giving authority must specially look out? The answer seems fairly clear. Indeed, it is likely that it won’t be before long that private institutio­ns of knowledge too will be brought under the mischief of the order.

The instructio­n must be withdrawn lock, stock and barrel. Seeing that the heads of scientific institutio­ns representi­ng over 1,500 top scientists of the country reacted publicly, principal scientific adviser K. Vijayaragh­avan and secretary (technology) Ashutosh Sharma have hinted at a modificati­on of the order. That isn’t enough, the whole thing must be scrapped. It is odd that that the PSA, a man of science, is not repelled by the tone and the meaning of the entire directive.

In short, the very idea of discussion

is being pushed into a room and the door banged shut in order to please

Big Brother.

A couple did a ‘wedding’ photoshoot in a government chopper in Raipur triggering a security scare, officials said on Monday.

A video of the couple posing for a photoshoot in the helicopter on Monday went viral, causing flutter in the security establishm­ent in Raipur.

Director of aviation department of Chhattisga­rh government Nilam Namdev has constitute­d a 3-member committee headed by chief pilot Pankaj Jaiswal to probe the incident.

The committee asked to submit within a week.

“A 3-member committee has been constitute­d to probe the incident. Informatio­n available till now suggests that a driver in the state aviation department had opened the state hangar for the couple to do the photoshoot. He has been placed under suspension. Accountabi­lity will be fixed on the officers found responsibl­e for the security lapse leading to the incident after the probe”, Namdev said.

One Sanket Sai and his wife, the newly married couple, had done photoshoot­s in wedding attire in the chopper on Sunday. The couple posed for the photoshoot inside and outside the helicopter.

Sanket is sarpanch of Dhandi Bahar village in Jashpur district in Chhattisga­rh and is said to be a relative of the driver in the state aviation department Yogeswar Sai who allegedly led the couple to the hangar. has been its report

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from India