Hindustan Times (Delhi)

In Room 106, an empty bed awaits its occupant

- A Mariyam Alavi aruveetil.alavi@htlive.com

NEWDELHI: While many may have given up the hope of finding Najeeb Ahmad, the JNU student who has been missing for a year, there is someone, or rather something that still awaits his return — his bed in Room 106 at the Mahi-mandavi Hostel.

Najeeb’s spot at the hostel in Jawaharlal Nehru University (JNU) has not been allotted to a new student this year. His roommate, Mohd Qasim, who was one of the last people to see Najeeb before he disappeare­d, has vowed that he will not allow the room to be allotted to anybody else.

It remains unclear why the room has not been allotted this year; the registrar, the spokespers­on and the hostel president all said they are unaware of the reasons why it has not been allotted. The dean of students, and the Rector-iii, to whom HT was directed by other officials were unavailabl­e for comment.

Qasim said that he had protested when the hostel caretaker had tried to list the spot as empty to get it allotted earlier this year.

“I told them that if they really need one more bed in the hostel, let them allot mine. I would have made other arrangemen­ts for myself. But this has to remain Najeeb’s room, at least for the years he would have been a student here,” he said.

Room 106 has been central to Najeeb’s case. The reported scuffle broke out here. He had then spent his last night at the hostel here, before he went missing.

Najeeb had been allotted the hostel in late September, and had gone missing on October 15. In this short span, he had also visited home for almost a week, leaving very little time for his peers to get to know him.

His only interactio­n during his

I told them that if they really need one more bed in the hostel, let them allot mine... this has to remain Najeeb’s room, at least for the years he would have been a student here. MOHD QASIM, Najeeb’s roommate

very short-lived stay at JNU seems to have been with Qasim; even that did not pervade basic niceties. Qasim said, that during his stay, he had not seen many people visit or call Najeeb. His mother was the only person Najeeb regularly called.

“I liked that about him. My parents passed away when I was young, so I liked how close he was to his mother. Only those don’t have one will know the value of a mother,” he said.

Even though Qasim is a member of the All India Students’ Associatio­n (AISA), he said that Najeeb displayed no interest in politics. “He had even asked me once what AISA was, and I had teased him about it... I did not want him to be politicall­y active either. I did not want a politicall­y active roommate. Otherwise, after all the work when I got back to my room, I would end up discussing politics again,” he said.

Qasim said he remembers a conversati­on he had about his love for poetry with Najeeb. “He was a science student. But I remember I recited a couplet for him and he immediatel­y understood what it meant. It had taken me, a language student, far longer than that to decipher it when I first heard it,” he said.

Qasim said that he had been away when the reported scuffles broke out between Najeeb and the others, and he still regrets it to this day. He adds that when he rushed to the room after hearing noises, he saw a crowd attacking Najeeb. “Sometimes I wish I had been in the room when the others had come knocking. Maybe they would have spoken to me, instead of Najeeb. Maybe none of this would have happened,” he said.

What will Qasim do if the administra­tion allots Najeeb’s spot to someone else?

“It will always be ‘Najeeb’s room.’ No matter who stays there,” said Qasim.

 ?? SANJEEV VERMA/HT PHOTO ?? The room has been central in Najeeb’s case. The scuffle with the alleged ABVP members also broke out there.
SANJEEV VERMA/HT PHOTO The room has been central in Najeeb’s case. The scuffle with the alleged ABVP members also broke out there.

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