Are DU Colleges Silencing Themselves in Fear of ABVP Violence?

Published on 2 Mar 2017 . 3 min read



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Is the thuggery at Ramjas College and the ensuing violence in Delhi University making colleges in the capital go into self-censorship mode?

Are potentially contentious college events being scrapped in fear of violence?

DSE Bans Student Gatherings on Campus, Disallows Anti-Violence Poetry Meet

Take, for instance, the Delhi School of Economics (DSE). On finding out that several students of the DSE were planning a slam poetry session on 27 February to protest the DU violence, the college promptly issued a notice.

Students were banned from hosting any gathering or event on the premises of the college with immediate effect, until further notice.

The reason cited for the move was simple – it was in the interest of the security of the DSE campus. 

Not only was the poetry session denied permission, the message from the college administration was clear. The authorities saw no point in risking a Ramjas repeat.

The ‘urgent notice’ issued by the Director of the Delhi School of Economics, banning student gatherings until further notice. (Photo: <b>The Quint</b>)

Says a well-placed DSE source close to the poetry slam event:

(Photo: <b>The Quint</b>)

Khalsa College's 'No' to ‘Nukkad Natak’

The mood was hardly any different at Delhi's Khalsa College. A street play event scheduled to be part of an inter-college festival on campus was suddenly called off on the morning of 23 February, the morning after the initial violence at Ramjas College.

All nine college contingents that had turned up ready to perform their act had to return disappointed.

The Principal of Khalsa College announced the decision ‘keeping the students’ safety in mind.’ The cause for concern? That the nukkad nataks could possibly contain content deemed ‘anti-national’ by the ABVP and friends. 

According to Kuljeet Singh, Assistant Professor at Khalsa's English Department, ABVP students within the college had warned that if anti-national statements were made in plays, the event would be disrupted by nationalist sloganeering by the ABVP.

Not the Right Time to Talk Kashmir?

On 23 February, Ambedkar University, Delhi, was to host an event commemorating the 26th anniversary of the alleged mass rapes by soldiers of the Indian Army in Jammu and Kashmir's villages of Kunan and Poshpora. But curiously enough, that event too was postponed.

Media reports asserted that it was an immediate fallout of the Ramjas ruckus, quoting a corroboration from a speaker at the event.

However, one of the event organisers, while speaking to The Quint, vehemently denied the accusations, stating that the events at Ramjas had nothing to do with the postponement.

The past one week has undoubtedly been a tumultuous time for university spaces in the capital. But will the violence in Delhi University on the 22-23 February leave a lasting impact on its colleges, maiming their tradition of free speech?

Is the self-censorship at DSE and Khalsa a transient phenomena? Or will these college administrations continue to silence themselves in the fear of violence?


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The Quint
The Quint is media with intelligence. The Quint is media for mobile consumption – quickly, visually and socially. The Quint is popular, digital journalism.


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