The Asian Age

‘We target to have zero discrimina­tion in campus...suicide unfortunat­e’

If you bypass all structures and come directly to the V-C, it is not good, says JNU’s Jagadesh Kumar

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JNU continues to be the hotbed of controvers­ies for the last one year. The recent one being the suicide of 28-year-old P.hD student Muthukrish­nan J. The controvers­ies have not even spared former IIT-Delhi professor M. JAGADESH KUMAR, who has been targeted by the students union for pursuing the “RSS agenda” ever since he took over as the varsity’s vice-chancellor on January 27 last year. In an interview with The Asian Age, Prof. Kumar told SUSHMITA GHOSH that the moment educationa­l institutio­ns deviate from academic excellence, they actually do the real social injustice because they will not be in a position to educate people who come from the marginalis­ed sections of the society.

Q. JNU recently received the best university award from the President. What makes JNU different from other universiti­es? A. The President’s award is a testimony that the University has excelled in many areas. JNU is renowned for its science and humanity streams and it focuses primarily on basic research. The university’s outlook is inclusiven­ess. Here, the student population and teaching community is quite heterogene­ous — belonging from various socio-economic background.

Q. As soon as you took over as JNU V-C last year, there has been no end to controvers­ies? Even you have been facing criticism? A. The word controvers­y is a perception, how you view a situation whether as a controvers­y or not. As a “scientist”, I am trained to face challenges, whether it is in the research or in academics or in administra­tion. For me, every event is a challenge to overcome and resolve issues surroundin­g it. I feel every organisati­on has officers entrusted with responsibi­lities and accountabi­lity. Therefore, if you bypass all those structures and come directly to the V-C, it is not good for the health of the university. Q. Some of the friends of Muthukrish­nan shared his FB post where he had alleged discrimina­tion in Mphil/PhD admissions. Will this pose a bigger challenge?

A. As an educator, none of us would like either any discrimina­tion happening during the admission process or after the students are admitted, especially considerin­g the fact that our students come from villages or rural background­s or marginalis­ed sections. It is very important that we put every effort to make sure that even remotely they don’t think that they are discrimina­ted. We target to have zero discrimina­tion in the campus .

Q. Several students are calling Muthukrish­nan to be the second Rohith Vemula. Do you think this unfortunat­e incident will hamper the environmen­t in the campus?

A. Any suicide is very unfortunat­e. In this case, the suicide took place outside JNU, the police informed us about it in the evening, and immediatel­y the administra­tion took steps to work together with the police. We are trying to help his family in conducting the post-mortem and take the body to their native place. Q. You were trolled on the social media for your recent tweet where you credited BJP’s victory in UP to developmen­t and inclusivit­y. What do you have to say about that? A. I did not make any tweet with respect to anybody. Today, in our country, we have various issues to tackle — higher education, employment or health facilities, in which even universiti­es play a great role as we are training the students to go back to the society and become productive agents of change. In that context, it is very important that universiti­es play a significan­t role in developing the country. And developmen­t should be inclusive.

As a ‘scientist’, I am trained to face challenges, whether it is in research or in academics

— M. Jagadesh Kumar, JNU V-C

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