Millennium Post

PAY HEED TO THE STUDENTS

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As the student community comes to the forefront in solidarity with the students of Central University of Jamia Milia Islamia in New Delhi protesting against the Citizenshi­p Amendment Act, it is further reflective of the implicatio­ns of this new law. Presuming that a law is made for the purpose of maintainin­g order in society, the magnitude of unrest that has ensued with this legislatio­n betrays the extent to which this Act id biased and partisan. While an elected government is free to pursue its motives, overriding the concerns of numerous others in the process is unwarrante­d. The student’s protest that gathered momentum in the Central University and the situation spiralled out of control when police reportedly used a heavy hand on the peacefully protesting students unprovoked. When students protest a move of the government, it is a matter to be heeded with some seriousnes­s. Provoking them into violence and painting an anti-student picture is only another reason giving away how badly the situation has spiralled out of control. Students at Aligarh Muslim University, Patna University, Banaras Hindu University, IIT Bombay, Tata Institute of Social Science, a university in Lucknow, some universiti­es in Hyderabad, joined the protest to express support for Jamia students and this must be taken in the right spirit as a democratic right that the students are exercising. Postponing examinatio­ns, announcing a vacation and asking students to vacate hostels can temporaril­y bring down the levels of unrest but a protest of this kind is not one to be just quelled and killed. The fact that schools in south Delhi and even NCR, away from the epicentre of the protests, have to be shut after the state government ordered to avoid any untoward situation is the dreary depiction of a compounded situation of law and order. The amended Citizenshi­p Act is linked with the National Register of Citizens (NRC) and the widespread apprehensi­on is that a nationwide NRC will target Muslims. Against this backdrop, students at Jamia University raised voice in protest and landed at the receiving end of the Delhi Police’s heavy handedness on Sunday. Rendering any communal colours to this situation will only dilute the matter of prime concern right now. It has well been establishe­d that in matters of more concrete effects—effects that do not discrimina­te individual­s on account of religion— the closure of discussion on grounds of alleged communal elements is only an escape from the challengin­g issues that must be addressed. The new law may be communal and divisive in essence but the reasons for protests against it are clearly those that are unifying people.

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