Hindustan Times (Amritsar)

Crackdown in BHU a new low

Police hooliganis­m against students on campuses must stop

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E arlier this year, Hindustan Times travelled to the Banaras Hindu University (BHU) campus to speak to girl students about their life there. The narrative that emerged was startling. “This is like life in Kashmir; isolated, alienated, and cut off from the mainstream,” said Anvesha

ourtake Mishra, a student at the Mahila Maha Vidyalaya, the women’s college inside the campus. In the course of the conversati­on, she listed the “absurd” and “discrimina­tory restrictio­ns” in the five girls’ hostels in BHU: No late nights, ‘decent’ clothing and no nonveg food, among others. “There’s no space for us to demand our rights, or express our opinion. We are simply required to read textbooks, and maybe, even act like robots,” Ms Mishra added.

This comment was prescient. Last week, protests broke out in the university after a student was allegedly molested. Instead of handling the issue with the empathy and restraint expected from a head of an academic institutio­n, the vicechance­llor called in the police, which started forcibly removing students from outside the V-C’s residence and a campus gate. This clash injured several students. The police’s conduct at BHU is disgracefu­l. But such actions against students have now become par for the course. Thanks to weak and politicise­d university administra­tions — be it at Jawaharlal Nehru University, Jadavpur University, Hyderabad Central University, and now at BHU — policemen now seem to have a free hand to act violently against protesting students. The police also lack training when it comes to handling women protesters or cases of violence against women. In BHU, in complete contravent­ion of the law, male policemen were sent to tackle women protesters.

The Uttar Pradesh government on Monday transferre­d three additional city magistrate­s and two policemen after the BHU mishandlin­g. But this is just not enough. Police hooliganis­m has to stop. But it will not happen unless political interferen­ce stops.

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