Centre sends team, Smriti speaks to Mehbooba on Srinagar NIT row
SRINAGAR / JAMMU / NEW DELHI: Tensions mounted at the National Institute of Technology (NIT) in Srinagar on Wednesday as the Centre rushed a probe team to the campus amid widespread condemnation of alleged police brutality against hundreds of non-Kashmiri students a day before.
Authorities cordoned off the campus that adjoins the Dal Lake and stationed paramilitary forces inside as Union home minister Rajnath Singh assured the safety of outstation students, who demanded the NIT be shifted out of the Valley and opposed the “antinational” Kashmiri students.
“Mehbooba ji assured that all students will be safe. She said an inquiry will be conducted to find out how the incident happened and also fix responsibility,” he said, referring to Jammu and Kashmir chief minister Mehbooba Mufti.
Human resource development minister Smriti Irani said she spoke to Mehbooba and that the two-member team will remain on campus until exams begin on April 11.
The incident has become the first major test for the CM as allegations of violence against non-Kashmiris can potentially pitch Hindu-majority Jammu against the Muslim-dominated Kashmir Valley.
This is a problem for Mehbooba as the alliance between her Peoples Democratic Party and the BJP rests on a promise of bringing these two hostile regions closer.
The campus flared up last Thursday after West Indies knocked India out of the World T20, when some Kashmiri pupils allegedly celebrated with firecrackers and shouted “anti-national” slogans.
Enraged, some non-Kashmiri students ran around campus with a tricolour, shouting ‘Bharat Mata ki Jai’ in protest.
Authorities shutdown the campus on Saturday but re-opened it on Monday. On Tuesday, 500 non-Kashmiri students tried to march out of the campus, saying they felt insecure and wanted to return to their homes. They were blocked by police and allegedly beaten up.
“No one is questioning those who raised anti-national slogans, instead we are facing atrocities of the local police and college administration,” a student said.
The incident comes weeks after Delhi was rocked by protests following the arrest of several students of Jawaharlal Nehru University for allegedly shouting “anti-national” slogans.
“There are several demands made by the students to the central team, including one to shift the NIT out of Srinagar to Jammu, considering the security threats caused in this incident,” a final year undergraduate student told HT.
The non-Kashmiri students demanded the police return their tricolour that was allegedly taken from them during Tuesday’s protests.
Of the 2,400-odd students in undergraduate courses, 50% come from state quota. But in post-graduate courses, admissions are open and based on entrance test scores.
State education minister Naeem Akhtar said the incident was not a local-versus-non-local issue but an administrative one that was being sorted out.
The police maintained they “chased the mob of students” after officers were assaulted.
The Congress joined the BJP, chamber of commerce, Hindu organisations against the alleged lathicharge.
“It is ironic. While students in Delhi are arrested on the basis of alleged fake videos, those who raise slogans for India in Kashmir are assaulted. Why this different yardstick?” asked party spokesman Manish Tewari.
On Wednesday, #NIT trended on social media as posts, videos and pictures of the clashes, including police allegedly firing teargas at the students’ hostel, did the rounds.
“Two companies of CRPF in a campus is not normal by any stretch of imagination. Requires tact, not use of force,” former chief minister Omar Abdullah tweeted.
First established as a Regional Engineering College in 1960 and made into an NIT in 2003, NIT-Srinagar is one of the top engineering institutes in the state. Situated near the famous Hazratbal shrine, NIT offers undergraduate, postgraduate and doctoral courses in technology and sciences.