Hindustan Times (Lucknow)

Stephen’s rejigs statute to leave teachers in cold

- Heena Kausar

The governing body of the city’s St Stephen’s College has accorded sweeping powers to the church and the principal over the prestigiou­s institutio­n, cutting back on teacher participat­ion in a move that may snap its affiliatio­n with the Delhi University.

A slew of amendments to the 102-year-old constituti­on would allow the principal to take disciplina­ry action against students or staff irrespecti­ve of the governing body’s opinion, triggering a barrage of condemnati­on from teachers and former students, who accused principal Valson Thampu of assuming dictatoria­l powers.

The governing body, which controlled the institutio­n, will be rendered toothless as the college’s supreme council — that is dominated by members of the Church of North India and has no teacher representa­tion — will have the final say in matters of student admissions and faculty appointmen­t.

The proposed amendments also reduce the representa­tion of teachers to two from the existing four.

“At a meeting of the governing body convened at 10am on Monday, the 30th of November, 2015 in the staff room of the college, the proposed amendments to the constituti­on of the college were considered in elaborate detail from every possible angle of considerat­ion. The longesteve­r meeting of the governing body lasted nearly eight hours,” Thampu said in a Facebook post.

Thampu is due to retire in February. Thampu added that the governing body also considered a variety of regulatory and empowering provisions and frameworks but it wasn’t clear if all of the proposed amendments were approved.

“The governing body found several of their observatio­ns valuable and the final outcome is richer on that count. The GB expresses its gratitude to the teachers concerned for taking this trouble,” the principal said in the post. “The second special session of the governing body will be held three months from now,” he added. As per the constituti­on, any amendment can be approved by conducting two meetings of the GB within a period of three months.

This is the first amendment to the constituti­on of the college in nearly four decades and has surprised many DU officials, who said the institutio­n may lose its affiliatio­n.

Set up in 1881, St Stephen’s is ranked among India’s best colleges but has been embroiled in an avalanche of controvers­ies in recent months, many of which have been centered around Thampu, sparking calls from alumni and teachers for his resignatio­n.

The principal has been at the centre of a storm since a student dragged him to court in April after being suspended for publishing an interview. The case triggered charges that Thampu was trying to muzzle freedom of expression in the college that has historical­ly been known for a culture of debate and dissent.

In June, an FIR by a former PhD student at the college revealed a sordid case of sexual harassment by a member of the faculty that Thampu allegedly tried to hush up by intimidati­ng the woman, igniting a torrent of criticism against him amid mounting calls for his dismissal.

The Supreme Court rapped the college authoritie­s in July for what it called an unfair internal inquiry against a professor for allegedly making “defamatory remarks” against Thampu. The remarks were in connection with his handling of a 2010 sexual harassment complaint against the college librarian.

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