UP orders inquiry into BHU violence
The National Commission for Women has cautioned the BHU V-C to act as a responsible administrator and ensure the safety and dignity of women on campus
After the Opposition parties slammed the state government and BHU authorities for being “insensitive” towards girl students, university vicechancellor Girish Chandra Tripathi said on Tuesday that an inquiry has been ordered into the violence in the university last week.
Mr Tripathi, who was in the national capital on Tuesday for the university’s executive council meeting, told reporters that he had recommended an inquiry headed by a retired high court judge. However, state government spokesperson and minister Srikant Sharma maintained a magisterial probe had been ordered.
The V-C, who was earlier criticised for saying that “if we listen to every girl we can’t run a university”, has come under
pressure after Varanasi commissioner Nitin Gokaran, in a preliminary report submitted on Tuesday, concluded that the BHU authorities did not deal with the sexual harassment victim’s complaint in a sensitive manner and did not handle the situation on time.
Several students, including women, and two journalists were injured in a lathicharge on university students during a protest over an alleged eve-teasing incident on Saturday night.
The National Human Rights Commission (NHRC) has also sought
Continued from Page 1 an explanation from the university over the violence and the National Commission for Women has cautioned Mr Tripathi to act as a responsible administrator and ensure safety and dignity of women on the campus.
The V-C has also been flayed by the Opposition parties for his alleged “RSS links”. There are reports stating that the VC was associated with the RSS for the past four decades and is a close associate of RSS icon Pandit Madan Mohan Malaviya’s grandson, Justice (retd) Giridhar Malaviya, who was part of a panel which recommended Mr Tripathi’s name for the university’s top post.
Earlier, speaking to mediapersons after a meeting of the state Cabinet chaired by chief minister Yogi Adityanath in Lucknow, Mr Sharma had said that the chief minister had taken the matter “very seriously” and a “judicial inquiry” had been ordered.
He corrected himself later. “By mistake, I had said earlier that it will be a judicial inquiry. It is in fact a magisterial inquiry,” Mr Sharma clarified. Mr Tripathi, who said that he had been keeping Union human resource development minister Prakash Javadekar updated on the issue, claimed that the violence was fanned by “rumour mongering” and “outsiders”. “We have the footage in which outsiders can be clearly seen at the protest... Rumours were spread that girls have been asked to vacate the hostels and those who were not involved in the protests also joined it,” he said.
The Uttar Pradesh Congress has sought an all-party parliamentary probe into the violence and hit out at Prime Minister Narendra Modi for not meeting the girl protestors during his Varanasi visit, saying “perhaps he does not know how to fulfil the duties of a father.”
State Congress chief Raj Babbar said, “There should be a credible probe by a team of MPs from all parties... Our PM was in Varanasi when the students were staging a dharna and he should have come... at least walked up to them as they were like his daughters. Perhaps, he does not know how to fulfil the duties of a father.”