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CRPF At JNU Campus As Students Take Out Massive Protest Against Fee Hike

JNUSU president tweeted out photos of CRPF personnel on campus on Monday.
CRPF at JNU
N Sai Balaji/Twitter
CRPF at JNU

The CRPF was called to the Jawaharlal Nehru University campus in Delhi on Monday after the JNU Students’ Union (JNUSU) went on strike against a new draft hostel manual approved by the varsity administration.

Former student’s union president N Sai Balaji tweeted out photos of CRPF personnel on campus.

The JNU student groups have been on a week-long strike against the new hostel manual alleging it has provisions for curfew timings, dress code and hostel fee hike.

Students and various student groups marched to the Vasant Kunj police station in protest on Monday to register a missing person complaint against the university’s Vice Chancellor. The students had first marched to the VC’s house, before moving on to the police station.

The university had on Friday said that the hostel fee has been hiked to create better facilities for students and dismissed that it would impose any curfew timings or dress code on students, PTI reported.

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However, several student groups like the Left-backed All India Students’ Association and Congress-affiliated National Students’ Union of India have demanded a rollback of the fee hike.

A statement issued by the students’ union, along with other student groups like Chhatra RJD and BAPSA, said the draft hostel manual also included “massive fines and punishments for expressing dissent” and wanted to convert JNU campus into a “prison”.

“It also seeks to arbitrarily hike the mess bill to the tune of twice or even thrice the amount currently charged by an average hostel mess,” the statement said.

The manual was missing procedures for the application of reservation policies in hostel allotment, the group claimed, excluding “students from socially and economically marginalised backgrounds from the university.”

It also condemned the exclusion of the students’ union from the meeting to decide on the hostel manual.

JNU Vice Chancellor Mamidala Jagadesh Kumar tweeted out a statement by the varsity’s registrar, which said the change in curfew timings and dress code were “rumours” and that there was “no massive hike in fee” or “curbs on free movement in the campus”.

JNUSU vice president Saket Moon told Hindustan Times they had been given a notice against their scheduled protest on Sunday night.

Meanwhile, Delhi Police said the CRPF personnel were not inside the campus but outside.

“One company force comprising of 80-90 paramilitary and local police personnel are deployed outside the JNU campus. It is just a precautionary arrangement as we have got to know about a protest over fee hike on the campus. No policeman is inside the campus,” DCP Devender Arya told HT.

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This article exists as part of the online archive for HuffPost India, which closed in 2020. Some features are no longer enabled. If you have questions or concerns about this article, please contact indiasupport@huffpost.com.