New Delhi, January 4
Nine students of Jawaharlal Nehru University (JNU) who have been suspended for allegedly disrupting a council meeting today alleged "witch-hunt" by the administration and said they were being "selectively targeted" for their political activism.
The administration, on the other hand, has issued another notice to these students giving them a second chance to depose before the enquiry committee and has decided to constitute a separate enquiry panel for probing the role of some faculty members in disrupting the Academic Council (AC) meeting last month.
"There has been a blatant violation of procedural norms and discriminatory witch-hunting of students belonging to marginalised and oppressed communities. The Proctor's office has adopted the vindictive and arbitrary method of slapping students with suspension notices on false and trumped up charges," Prashant Kumar, one of the suspended students, said during a press conference.
"The statement issued by the university itself mentions that we went to the venue when the meeting had successfully concluded. Then how could it had been disrupted by us? The administration has selectively targeted those students who are politically active on campus," he added.
Nine students were suspended last month for allegedly disrupting the AC meeting.—PTI
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