advertisement
A Dalit student in his second-year at Tata Institute of Social Sciences (TISS), Hyderabad, has accused a faculty member of caste-based discrimination.
The student, Prabakaran, said that he was disqualified from contesting student council elections by a lecturer because he had earlier spoken out against the lecturer's alleged casteist remarks.
Belonging to the Scheduled Caste community, Prabakaran was among the students who went on a hunger strike in July to protest against the TISS administration for seeking a fee of Rs 54,650 upfront from Scheduled Caste and Scheduled Tribe (ST) students who rely on the Government of India Post Matric Scholarship (GoIPMS) for their education.
During the protest, Prabakaran alleged that the chairperson of student affairs, Bibhu Prasad Nayak, made a casteist comment against SC and ST students.
Prabakaran alleged that Bibhu Prasad then disqualified him from the Executive Committee of the Students’ Council for confronting him during the protest.
Prabakaran had applied for the post of Returning Officer, along with 11 other students, for the upcoming students’ election in the college. However, he later learned that he was disqualified from the elections after Bibhu Prasad allegedly interfered and wrote to TISS Mumbai against his selection.
According to Prabakaran, he had cleared the interview for the Returning Officer post. However, as there was a delay in announcing the results, he spoke to a lecturer, who claimed that he was selected.
As the results were still being delayed, he then approached Bibhu Prasad, who allegedly told him, “Your name won’t be there in the list.”
“When I confronted him earlier, he must have thought, 'how could a Dalit student question him?', and held that grudge against me," Prabakaran said.
Numerous attempts to reach out to Bibhu Prasad were unsuccessful.
However, a professor from the administration told TNM that Prabakaran was disqualified from the post as he was served a show-cause notice for protesting in the campus, after which TISS Hyderabad was shut down for a brief period.
Along with Prabakaran, 29 other students and their parents received the notice, accusing them of indiscipline.
The students who received the show-cause notices accuse the administration of taking vindictive action against them.
A case is ongoing in the Telangana High Court with regard to the campus charging an exorbitant fee, and recently the court had slammed the administration for issuing notices to the protesting students.
Meanwhile, Prabakaran has written to the SC/ST students' welfare cells of both TISS Mumbai and Hyderabad seeking their intervention in the issue.
(This article was originally published by The News Minute and has been republished here with permission).
(At The Quint, we question everything. Play an active role in shaping our journalism by becoming a member today.)
Published: undefined