Standing With JNU, from Around the World – Statements of Solidarity
Even as reports of Kanhaiya Kumar being beaten under the police's gaze have surfaced, and a tense standoff between the people of Jawaharlal Nehru University and the Delhi police drags on, various academic communities from around the world have written in with their support for the students. The ones The Wire has received are collected and reproduced, in full, below.
- Architects in solidarity with the JNU community
- IIT Delhi faculty - Letter of solidarity for JNU
- Syracuse University - Statement of solidarity for academic freedom in India
- University of Oxford members, alumni - In solidarity with JNU
- Japanese scholars working on India - Statement in support of the teaching and student community of Jawaharlal Nehru University
- Statement of solidarity by Noam Chomsky, Orhan Pamuk, and others
- Stanford University extends solidarity to JNU
- Letter of solidarity with JNU students and faculty from professionals, academics and artists in West Bengal
- Statement from academicians in Gujarat
- Canadian academics stand with JNU and student struggles in India
- Open letters from CeMIS professors and students expressing solidarity with JNU students and staff
- Statement of solidarity with student activists in India, from Pennsylvania
- Bangalore research network's letter of solidarity with JNU
- In solidarity with the dissenting student community in India: A statement from Australia
- Statement of solidarity with Jawaharlal Nehru University, India – City University of New York
- Statement of support for JNU – from the academic community of Rhode Island (PDF)
- Statement from Sri Lanka in solidarity with protesting students of India (PDF)
- Statement of solidarity with JNU from members of Yale University
- A citizen’s appeal to the president of India to restore trust in the democratic spirit of our Constitution (PDF)
- Statement of solidarity from the Indian Institute of Management, Bangalore (PDF)
- UK South Asia Institutes in solidarity with JNU
- Statement of solidarity from a group of alumni – TISS, India (PDF)
- Open letter in support of the students and faculty of JNU – Berlin academics
1. Architects in solidarity with the JNU community
To: The JNU Teachers Association, JNU Students Union
CC: Vice Chancellor, JNU
We are writing this in utmost shock and despair regarding the recent events and developments at your campus. We want to extend our full support to the JNU teachers association and the democratically elected JNU Student Union. We believe there is a difference between the nation, the state and the government of the day, and fully support your constitutional right to air your positions, as different or diverse as they may be, without illegal interference from any particular ruling ideology, party or state machinery.
As those engaged in architecture, we believe that imagination and reason are the highest of human faculties. This gift is what we constantly cultivate and rely on – in academia and in practice - when we question what exists, however natural, fixed and irreplaceable it may seem, and fearlessly posit alternatives. Indeed, there is little difference for us between possessing a moral imagination and being able to imagine such alternate worlds and other ways of being.
The inability therefore to envision life in another’s shoes, to disagree and to counter ideas with more aesthetic or eloquent ones without resorting to character assassination, violence and charges of anti-nationalism, betray to us an alarming lack of imagination, and we strongly condemn this in all its forms.
We condemn this absence of imagination and the physical and epistemic violence it has unleashed on the university community especially teachers and students. We stand with you in support of the university as a marketplace of ideas where all ideas and opinions are passionately argued, ripped apart, defended and critically re-imagined in ever new ways, leading to a more enlightened citizenry. This must be allowed to happen without fear or favour, risk of persecution or charges of sedition. If nothing else, the imagination of our founding fathers demands it, and we are in solidarity with your right to exercise it.
(This statement represents us in our individual capacities and not the institutions we are associated with.)
Signatories: (In alphabetical order)
| S.No. | Name | Designation | Location |
| 1 | A.Srivathsan | Professor, CEPT University Ahmedabad | Ahmedabad |
| 2 | Abhishek Biswas | Industrial Designer | Goa |
| 3 | Ajas P Fasal | Architect | Trivandrum |
| 4 | Akshay Srinivas | Student | Delhi |
| 5 | Amit Rastogi | Team lead, CnT Architects | Bangalore |
| 6 | Amit Sarma | Associate Professor, Sushant School of Art and Architecture | Delhi |
| 7 | Amrita Dasgupta | Architect | New Delhi |
| 8 | Amrita Madan | Professor | New Delhi |
| 9 | Aneesh Babu | Architect | Dubai, United Arab Emirates |
| 10 | Anisha | Architect | Delhi |
| 11 | Aparna V | Architect | Kochi, Kerala |
| 12 | Arsh | Architect | Delhi |
| 13 | Arun Jacob Mathew | Architect | |
| 14 | Arun.S.R. | Architect | Kerala |
| 15 | Arusree Mohanty Chhaya | Architect | Sweden |
| 16 | Ashish Byakod | Architect | Bangalore |
| 17 | Ashwini Kher | Assistant Professor | Gurgaon |
| 18 | Avni Mehta | Student | New Delhi |
| 19 | B S Bhooshan | Architect. Principal BSB Architects | Mysore |
| 20 | Bhawna Jaimini | Program Assistant, Hunnarshala Foundation | Bhuj, Gujarat |
| 21 | Boney Philip | Project Manager | Dubai |
| 22 | Debashree | Architect, Academician | Bangalore |
| 23 | Debasish Borah | Project director, Roots Collective, Ladakh | Leh |
| 24 | Deeksha | Architect | New Delhi |
| 25 | Deepak Kumar | Student, M. Arch (Urban Design) | Delhi |
| 26 | Deepanshu Arneja | Architect | New Delhi |
| 27 | Deepu Ravi | Editor | Trivandrum |
| 28 | Divya Chopra | Architect | New Delhi |
| 29 | Dr Vibhuti Sachdev | Professor | Delhi |
| 30 | G Shankar | Chief, Habitat Technology Group | Thiruvanananthapuram |
| 31 | Ganga Dileep C | Architect, Assistant Professor | Trivandrum |
| 32 | Gaurav Roychoudhury | Architect | Bangalore |
| 33 | Girish Chandran | Lecturer, College of Architecture Trivandrum | Trivandrum |
| 34 | Harshavardhan | Architect | Bangalore |
| 35 | Immanuel J Nicholas | Architect | Bangalore |
| 36 | Indu V | Junior Architect | Kerala |
| 37 | Ishan Pal | Student | Delhi |
| 38 | Ismet Khambatta | Director | Ahmedabad |
| 39 | Jaisim | Architect | Bangalore |
| 40 | Jaweed Darbar | Architect- Engineer | Bangalore |
| 41 | Jayaraj Sundaresan | Academic | Bangalore |
| 42 | Jinoj M. | Assistant Professor | Trivandrum |
| 43 | Juhi Malpani | Architect-Town Planner | Delhi |
| 44 | Kamlesh Pohekar | Associate Professor | Bangalore |
| 45 | Kanchan Gupta | Architect & Planner | Mumbai |
| 46 | Kanishka Prasad | Architect, DESIGN Daftar | New Delhi |
| 47 | Karan Grover | Principal, Karan Grover & Associates | Baroda |
| 48 | Karthik K Shetty | Freelancer | Karnataka |
| 49 | Kiranjith CS | Assistant Professor, KMEA College of architecture. | Kochi, kerala |
| 50 | Kshitij Dhyani | M.Arch, student, Sir JJ College of Architecture, Mumbai | Delhi |
| 51 | Leon Morenas | Associate Professor of Architecture | Delhi |
| 52 | Madhav Raman | Partner, Anagram Architects | New Delhi |
| 53 | Mahesh Radhakrishnan | Principal Architect | Chennai |
| 54 | Manasi | Co founder, Partner. Bhoomija Creations. | Trivandrum |
| 55 | Manish Ahuja | Architect | New Delhi |
| 56 | Manpreet Juneja | Architect | Delhi |
| 57 | Manu Mahajan | Urban Designer | Delhi |
| 58 | Maria Katticaran | Architect | Los Angeles |
| 59 | Maya Gomez | Architect | Trivandrum |
| 60 | Miki Desai | Architect, teacher, writer | Ahmedabad |
| 61 | Madhavi Desai | Architect, teacher, writer | Ahmedabad |
| 62 | Mona | Architect | Delhi |
| 63 | Monica Chaudhary | Architect | New Delhi |
| 64 | Mukta Naik | Visiting Faculty, School of Planning and Architecture | Gurgaon |
| 65 | Naveen Mahantesh | Principal Architect, Cresarc Architects | Bangalore |
| 66 | Neelkanth Chhaya | Architect | Ahmedabad |
| 67 | Nipesh | Architect | Delhi |
| 68 | Niveditaa Gupta | Architect and Photographer | New Delhi |
| 69 | Parul Choudhary | Co-Principal PS Collective | Ahmedabad |
| 70 | Prabir Haldar | Architect | New Delhi |
| 71 | Prahlad G | Architect | Ahmedabad |
| 72 | Pramod balakrishnan | Chief architect | Chennai |
| 73 | Prem Chandavarkar | Managing Partner, CnT Architects | Bangalore |
| 74 | Priyanka Purty | Architect | Jharkhand |
| 75 | Prof. Manoj Mathur | HoD, Architecture, SPA New Delhi | Delhi |
| 76 | Prof.Oommen.T | Architect | Trivandrum |
| 77 | Prosenjit Banerjee | Architect | New Delhi |
| 78 | Radhika Singh | Architect | New Delhi |
| 79 | Raja Shyam Sundar | Architect | Chennai |
| 80 | Rajshree Rajmohan | Architect & academician | |
| 81 | Ratnakiran | architect, assistant professor | Vijayawada |
| 82 | Rita John | Assistant Professor of Architecture, USAP, Delhi | Delhi |
| 83 | Rojan Thomas Joseph | Architect | Bangalore |
| 84 | Ruchika Lall | Architect | Delhi |
| 85 | Rupali Gupte | Associate Professor, Founding Trustee, School of Environment and Architecture | Mumbai |
| 86 | Ruturaj Parikh | Director, Charles Correa Foundation. | Goa |
| 87 | Ryan Christopher Sequeira | Fellow, National Institute of Urban Affairs | Delhi |
| 88 | Sahil Sasidharan | Associate - Academics & Research, IIHS | Bangalore/Bengaluru |
| 89 | Saiju Mohamed | Architect | Kerala |
| 90 | Samruddhi S Chaphale | Architect | |
| 91 | Sanjana Mathur | Architect | New Delhi |
| 92 | Sara Ather | Architect | Delhi |
| 93 | Sathyanarayan M | architect | Kerala |
| 94 | Satya Gopalan | Architect | Delhi |
| 95 | Saurabh Tewari | Research Scholar | Kanpur |
| 96 | Selva Prakash M | Assistant Professor, Tips Global Institute | Chennai |
| 97 | Shabeeb Khader | Project Architect | United States |
| 98 | Shaji TL | Professor | Trivandrum |
| 99 | Sharat Sunder R | Asst. Professor | Thiruvananthapuram |
| 100 | Shebin George | Architect | thiruvananthapuram |
| 101 | Shikha Doogar | Partner, R+D Studio | Gurgaon |
| 102 | Shitij Dogra | Architect | New delhi |
| 103 | Shobana | Assistant professor | Chennai |
| 104 | Shreyasi Pal | Asst. Prof | Bangalore |
| 105 | Shridhar Rao | Architect | Gurgaon |
| 106 | Shyamkumar P | Architect | Kanhangad |
| 107 | Shyne U | HOD, KMEA COA | Cochin |
| 108 | Sinu Rao | Architect | JUBAIL,KSA |
| 109 | Smriti | Asst. Professor | Delhi |
| 110 | Sobia | Consultant urban planner | Bengaluru |
| 111 | Sonal Sundararajan | Partner, ADRG | Mumbai |
| 112 | Soumini Raja | Asst. Professor, College of Architecture Trivandrum | Trivandrum |
| 113 | Soumya Shukla | Architect | Delhi |
| 114 | Sourabh Phadke | Architect | Himachal Pradesh |
| 115 | Sreejith.S | Landscape Architect | Thiruvananthapuram |
| 116 | SS Kiran | Urban Transport Planner | Nagpur |
| 117 | Subin Umar Rahman | Architect | Trivandrum |
| 118 | Surbhi Singhal | Architect | Delhi |
| 119 | Swati Janu | Architect | Delhi |
| 120 | Tallulah D Silva | Architect | |
| 121 | Thomas Oommen | Associate Professor, Sushant School of Art and Architecture | Delhi |
| 122 | TM Cyriac | Architect | Trivandrum |
| 123 | Vaani Dua | Asst. Professor | Delhi |
| 124 | Vandini Mehta | Architect | New Delhi |
| 125 | Vanicka Arora | Conservation Architect | Gurgaon |
| 126 | Vidhu Saxena | Freelance Designer | New Delhi |
| 127 | Vishakha Jha | Architect, Urban Development Consultant | Mumbai |
| 128 | Vrinda Jariwala | Asst. Professor, S.S.A.A., Ansal University | Delhi |
| 129 | Zeenat Niazi | Vice President, Development Alternatives | New Delhi |
2. Letter of solidarity for JNU from members of IIT Delhi faculty
We, a group of faculty members from IIT Delhi, are seriously concerned by the events unfolding at JNU and in the national capital over the past few days. A university space is an invitation to think, discuss, argue, debate sometimes heatedly, but always with respect. This respect must extend to ideas one disagrees with. It is only from such an open exchange of ideas that our collective understanding can increase, and knowledge can advance. But it seems that the spaces for such open discussion, of which JNU has always been one, are gradually being closed across the country.
We condemn the increasingly narrow definitions of nationalism that are being imposed on the citizens of India and used as instruments for the closing of the Indian mind. We choose to embrace a nationalism which celebrates our plurality as a country, and which is not threatened by dissent and disagreement. We stand with all those who share this vision.
(This statement is issued in our individual capacities, and does not represent the institution’s opinion.)
- Krishna AchutaRao (Centre for Atmospheric Sciences)
- Sumeet Agarwal (Electrical)
- Vibha Arora (Humanities and Social Sciences)
- Amitabha Bagchi (Computer Science)
- Somnath Baidya Roy (Centre for Atmospheric Sciences)
- Premachandran Balachandran (Mechanical)
- Subhashis Banerjee (Computer Science)
- Varsha Banerjee (Physics)
- Biswajit Bhattacharjee (Civil)
- Bijoy Boruah (Humanities and Social Sciences)
- Arudra Burra (Humanities and Social Sciences)
- Charusita Chakravarty (Chemistry)
- Pritha Chandra (Humanities and Social Sciences)
- Shouri Chatterjee (Electrical)
- Santanu Chaudhury (Electrical)
- Divya Dwivedi (Humanities and Social Sciences)
- Naveen Garg (Computer Science)
- Arjun Ghosh (Humanities and Social Sciences)
- James Gomes (School of Biological Sciences)
- K Hariharan (Mechanical)
- Samar Husain (Humanities and Social Sciences)
- Farhana Ibrahim (Humanities and Social Sciences)
- Ravinder Kaur (Humanities and Social Sciences)
- Stuti Khanna (Humanities and Social Sciences)
- Reetika Khera (Humanities and Social Sciences)
3. Statement of solidarity for academic freedom in India (Syracuse University)
We, the undersigned at Syracuse University, Colgate University, and SUNY College of Environmental Science and Forestry, are in solidarity with our comrades at Jawaharlal Nehru University (JNU), India against the ongoing anti-democratic actions by the Indian state. We demand an immediate end to the police action against students on campus, and withdrawal of all charges against Kanhaiya Kumar, President of the JNU Students’ Union. We further demand that the Central Government put an immediate end to its prejudiced persecution of student activists on campuses across the country.
We strongly believe that the charge of sedition against Kanhaiya Kumar follows spurious claims. This arrest is an excuse for the state to root out dissenting voices on JNU campus, a move towards converting educational institutions like JNU into an arm of the authoritarian state. Attempts of a similar nature have been witnessed recently at other Indian educational institutions such as Film and Television Institute of India (FTII) and Hyderabad University. The growing threat to academic freedom posed by the current political climate is transnational, and extends beyond India to other parts of the world--it is a threat we face here in the United States, too.
For any word or action to qualify as being “seditious” under Indian law, it has to directly issue a call to violence. This was not the nature of the protest held by JNU students against the judicial killing of Afzal Guru, who was convicted of an attack on the Indian parliament. The peaceful protest held on February 9 on campus was not unlike other protests convened at the university over the last several decades. Dissent is an essential part of a healthy democracy. We therefore strongly condemn the Indian government’s response to the students’ protests and demand that the state refrain from authoritarian behaviour. In this spirit, we urge the Vice Chancellor of JNU to protect members of the university community and safeguard their democratic rights.
- Natasha S.K., Social Science, Syracuse University
- Taveeshi Singh, Social Science, Syracuse University
- Mitul Baruah, Geography, Syracuse University
- Sean Wang, Geography, Syracuse University
- Miguel Contreras, Geography, Syracuse University
- Manuela Ruiz Reyes, Geography, Syracuse University
- Carolina Arango-Vargas, Anthropology, Syracuse University
- Tina Catania, Geography, Syracuse University
- Linh Khanh Nguyen, Anthropology, Syracuse University
- Jon Erickson, Geography, Syracuse University
- Tom Perreault, Geography, Syracuse University
- Jessie Speer, Geography, Syracuse University
- Sravani Biswas, History, Syracuse University
- Don Mitchell, Geography, Syracuse University
- Tod Rutherford, Geography, Syracuse University
- Jacquelyn Micieli Voutsinas, Geography, Syracuse University
- Sturdy Knight, Information Studies, Syracuse University
- Jenna Sikka, Sociology, Syracuse University
- Jaisang Sun, Social Science, Syracuse University
- Madhura Lohokare, Anthropology, Syracuse University
- Brian Dobreski, Information Studies, Syracuse University
- Sujata Bajracharya, Religion, Syracuse University
- Chandra Talpade Mohanty, Women’s and Gender Studies, Syracuse University
- Alisa Weinstein, Anthropology, Syracuse University
- Li Chen, Mass Communications, Syracuse University
- Taapsi Ramchandani, Anthropology, Syracuse University
- Laura Jaffee, Cultural Foundations of Education, Syracuse University
- Tula Goenka, Television-Radio-Film, Syracuse University
- Romita Ray, Art and Music Histories, Syracuse University
- Dorothy Kou, Sociology, Syracuse University
- Kriangsak Terrakowitkajom, Geography, Syracuse University
- Susan S. Wadley, Anthropology, Syracuse University
- Emily Mitchell-Eaton, Geography, Syracuse University
- Scarlett Rebman, History, Syracuse University
- Matt Huber, Geography, Syracuse University
- Brian Hennigan, Geography, Syracuse University
- Parvathy Binoy, Geography, Syracuse University
- Liz Mount, Sociology, Syracuse University
- Himika Bhattacharya, Women's & Gender Studies, Syracuse University
- John Western, Geography, Syracuse University
- Vani Kannan, Composition and Cultural Rhetoric, Syracuse University
- Ani Maitra, Film and Media Studies, Colgate University
- Diane Swords, Cultural Foundations of Education, Syracuse University
- Alejandro Camargo, Geography, Syracuse University
- Cecilia Van Hollen, Anthropology, Syracuse University
- Alexandra Jebbia, Documentary Film & History, Syracuse University
- David Gustavsen, English, Syracuse University
- Michael Gill, Cultural Foundations of Education, Syracuse University
- Tiago Teixeira, Geography, Syracuse University
- Nimanthi Rajasingham, English, Colgate University
- Kimberly E. Powell, Women’s & Gender Studies, Syracuse University
- Sharon Moran, Environmental Studies, SUNY-ESF
- Adam Fix, Environmental Studies, SUNY-ESF
- Alvaro A. Salas, Public Administration, Syracuse University
- Diane R. Wiener, Division of Student Affairs - Disability Cultural Center, Syracuse University
- Brett Keegan, Composition and Cultural Rhetoric, Syracuse University
- Jyoti G. Balachandran, History, Colgate University
- Barbara L. Regenspan, Educational Studies, Colgate University
- Deborah J. Knuth Klenck, English, Colgate University
- Suzanne B. Spring, Writing & Rhetoric, Colgate University
- Cristina Serna, Women’s Studies, Colgate University
- Joel Bordeaux, Religion, Colgate University
- Mark Stern, Educational Studies, Colgate University
- Susan Thomson, Peace and Conflict Studies, Colgate University
- Kapil Mandrekar, Environmental and Forest Biology, SUNY-ESF
- Jackie Orr, Sociology, Syracuse University
4. In solidarity with JNU: University of Oxford members, alumni
We, the undersigned members and alumni of the University of Oxford, stand firmly in solidarity with fellow students, teachers and scholars at the Jawaharlal Nehru University (JNU). We condemn the ongoing persecution of the student community in JNU, in particular the arrest of JNU Students Union (JNUSU) president Kanhaiya Kumar under sedition charges. We protest the use of institutional and state machinery to stifle dissent on campuses, and the attempt to persecute those whose views do not conform to the narrow narratives of ‘nationalism’, ‘nationhood’ and ‘Indian culture’ promoted and endorsed by the ruling party. We view the crackdown in JNU in a continuum with the use of state machinery to clamp down on dissenting views and ideologies on campuses, most prominently at the FTII, Jadavpur University, IIT-Madras and the University of Hyderabad (UoH). We would like to point out that it was a similar witchhunt, backed by state authority, that led to the suicide of Dalit scholar and student leader of the Ambedkar Students' Association, Rohith Vemula. We also stand in solidarity with the ongoing rally hunger strike at UoH and the struggles of the Joint Action Committee for Social Justice, demanding justice for Rohith Vemula.
We are concerned that sections of the Indian Penal Code (IPC) have been used to criminalise dissent. University campuses are meant to provide spaces for deliberation and even disagreement; the abuse of the law in order to stifle students’ voices is indicative of an authoritarian state’s attempts to ideologically capture the university space. Further, we believe that Section 124-A of the IPC, which codifies the law on sedition, is fundamentally anachronistic to a democratic state. Even so, for a charge of sedition to be made out, the law requires that violence must necessarily follow subversive speech, which is conspicuously absent in this case.
We are distressed by reported violence targeting students, professors and journalists on the premises of the Patiala House Court, both inside and outside the courtroom, on February 15 and 17, 2016. We urge all responsible parties, including the police and court personnel, to fulfill their constitutional duty in ensuring a fair and secure trial. That this happened under the silent watch of the police and other authorities, is indicative of their complicity. We are also concerned about the profiling and vilification of certain students by sections of the media; for instance, the irresponsible media reportage on JNU student Umar Khalid is a grave point of concern.
We condemn the continued police presence in the JNU campus. We appeal to the government and police to understand us, first, as a broad spectrum of students, who believe in different ideologies, but come together to demand the right to hold these independent beliefs without the threat of state sanctioned violence. We believe that the idea of India, as a multifarious nation, cannot and must not be held ransom by the hyper-nationalism of a particular group. Protecting the university space, where the critical spirit of questioning is nurtured, must remain of utmost importance to any democratic state. These events have, in effect, become a vicious attack on more than just the freedom of expression, speech and ideation guaranteed to us by the Constitution of India. We admire JNU's resilience, and we stand with JNU in this moment of crisis, as a mark of our commitment to the freedom of thought and action and in support of the freedom from fear — of the state, surveillance and pernicious political control.
Signed,
1.Umika Pidaparthy, MSc Social Science of the Internet, 2015-2016
2.Amrita Sengupta, MSc Social Science of the Internet, 2015-16
3.Deepa Kurup, MPhil candidate, Oxford Department of International Development
4.Baisali Mohanty, MSc Contemporary India, School of Interdisciplinary Area Studies
5.Jayesha M. Koushik, MPhil Development Studies, 2015-2017
6.Divya David, MSc Contemporary India, 2014-15
7.Yasser Shams Khan, DPhil English, 2015-2019
8.Mansi Sood, Bachelor of Civil Law, 2015-16
9.Gala Pouzanov, MPhil English Studies
10.Payaswini Tailor, MPhil Politics, Department of Politics and International Relations
11.Sanya Samtani, Bachelor of Civil Law, 2015-2016
12.Varun Ramesh, MSc. in Contemporary India, 2016
13.Natasha Maru, MPhil in Development Studies 2016
14.Padmini Gopal, MSc Contemporary India, 2016
15.Lipika Kamra, DPhil, Department of International Development
16.Sneha Krishnan, DPhil Development Studies, 2015
17.Tara Greig, DPhil in British History
18.Gabriella Crimi, MPhil in Development Studies, 2017
19.Kalyani Madhura Ramachandran, MPhil Anthropology, 2015
20.Onaiza Drabu, MSc Social Anthropology, 2016
21.Niyati Sharma, D.Phil English, 2014-2017
22.Rumi Pegu, MSc. in Contemporary India, 2015-16
23.Yussef Robinson, BA History and Politics
24.Jinal Dadiya, Bachelor of Civil Law 2015-16
25.Carl Ohman, MSc in Social Science of the Internet, 2015-2016
26.Sneha Menon, MPhil Economics, 2015
27.David Adler, MPhil Politics, 2017
28.Alice Lepeuple, MSc in Political Theory Research, 2015-2016
29.Gitanjali Keshava, Bachelor of Civil Law 2015-2016
30.Deniz Duru Aydin, MSc Candidate, 2015-16
31.Sonali Chowdhry, Candidate for MPhil Economics, 2015-2017
32.Harendar Neel, Bachelor of Civil Law, 2015-2016
33.Aisha Ahmad, MPhil Development Studies, 2017
34.Lakshmy Venkatesh, MSt Archaeology, 2016
35.Ashwin Menon, MSc Education, 2015-16
36.Challenger Mishra, D.Phil. in Theoretical Physics, 2011
37.Paris Zhao, Oxford Internet Institute, 2016
38.Prerna Bakshi, Msc Global Governance and Diplomacy
39.Anne Payne, MSt Global & Imperial History 2016
40.Amit Kumar, D.Phil Candidate Chemistry
41.Amba Uttara Kak, Bachelor of Civil Law, 2015-2016
42.L Molloy, DPhil Social Science of the Internet
43.Ashley Pople, MSc in Economics for Development, 2015-2016
44.Rebecca Byrnes, Bachelor of Civil Law, 2015-2016
45.Leo Boonzaier, DPhil (Law) student
46.Dr Rahul Gandhi, BSc (Neuroscience), MBChB, Member, Royal Australasian College of Physicians, Fulbright Awardee, MBA University of Oxford 2015-16
47.Dr. Bhaskar Bhushan, DPhil Organic Chemistry, 2010-2014
48.Dr. Aakashi Bhatt, MSc Clinical Embryology, 2015-2016
49.Jose Ignacio Morales, Magister Juris, 2015-2016
50.Anisha Sharma, DPhil Economics, 2011-16
51.Jessica Glennie, MSc Environmental Change and Management, 2015
52.Shannon Philip, D.Phil International Development
53.Leonie Hoffmann, PPE, 2014
54.Mayanka Mukherji, MPhil in Visual, Material and Museum Anthropology, 2015
55.Seham Areff, MSc Global Governance and Diplomacy, 2015-2016
56.Tushar Menon, DPhil in Philosophy
57.Natalya Din-Kariuki, DPhil Candidate in English, 2013
58.Utkarsh Bhatnagar
59.Richa Sinha, ECM
60.Diptasri Basu, Master of Public Policy, Blavatnik School of Government, 2015-2016
61.Vimal Balasubramaniam, DPhil (Candidate), Said Business School
62.Subhashish Bhadra, M. Phil. In Economics
63.Teja Varma Pusapati, D.Phil Student in English
64.Neelakshi Tewari, M.Sc. Education, 2015
65.Fran Green-Armytage, Chemistry
66.Geetanjali Sharma
67.Rakesh Sharma, DPhil, 2009
68.Nikhil M. Pandhi, M.Phil Archeology
69.Julian Pohl, MPhil in Politics
70.Priyanka Mehra, MSc Contemporary India
71.Ria Kapoor, D.Phil History, 2015
72.Charlie Tyson, MSc History of Science, Medicine, and Technology, 2016
73.Ned Dostaler, MPhil Medical Anthropology, 2015
74.Deeksha Manchanda, Bachelor of Civil Law, 2013
75.Martin Pastor, Magister Juris, 2016
76.Garima Singh, MSc Environmental Change and Management, 2014-15
77.Andrew Wheeler, MSc in Economics for Development, 2016
78.Emile Rolland, Mst. Modern South Asian Studies Postgraduate
79.Marlena Valles, Bachelor of Civil Law, 2015-2016
80.Amogha Varsha, DPhil, 2010-14
81.Cannelle Gueguen-Teil, MPhil Development Studies, 2015-17
82.Gautam Bondada, D.Phil Archaeology, 2012-17
83.Faiza Rahman , Bachelor of Civil Law, 2015-16
84.Meghan Finn, Bachelor of Civil Law, 2015-16
85.Tyler Overton, MPhil Development Studies, 2015-16
86.Manish Kushwaha, D.Phil. Biochemistry, 2006-10
87.Aban Haq, MPhil Development Studies, 2015-17
88.Abhinav, Bachelor of Business Administration, 2012-15
89.Lakshmi Neelakantan, MSc Evidence-Based Social Intervention and Policy Evaluation, 2015-16
90.Devony Schmidt, MPhil European Politics & Society, 2014-2016
91.Ellie Marshall, MSc Social Science of the Internet, 2014-2015
92.Joseph Barrett, MPhil in Economic and Social History, 2017
93.Chetna Shrivastava, Bachelor of Civil Law, 2015-2016
94.Souktik Roy, BA-MMath, 2014
95.Sai Gourisankar, MSt Global and Imperial History, 2015
96.Kaushal Vidyarthee, MPhil in Development Studies, 2006-08
97.Andrea Wright, MSc Physics 2016
98.Debasmita Padhi, MSc Economics for Development, 2015-16
99.Rachael Midlen, MPhil Development Studies, 2014-2016
100.Pavithra Srinivasan, MSc Social Anthropology, 2013-14
101.Anders Møller, MPhil Development Studies, 2014-2016
102.Sana Moyeen, MPhil Development Studies, 2015-17
103.Byron Gray, M.Phil in Social Anthropology, 2012-2014
104.Prerna Bakshi, Msc. Global Governance and Diplomacy, 2015-16
105.Achas Burin, Dphil, 2015)
106.Vincent Wolff Zahner, Master of Public Policy, 2015-16
107.Arpita Varghese, MSc Global Governance and Diplomacy, 2015-16
108.Shreya Atrey, DPhil (Law), Bachelor of Civil Law, 2011-15
109.Garima Jaju, DPhil International Development, 2015-18
110.Soumya Mishra, DPhil International Development 2015
111.Vasudha Sharma, Bachelor of Civil Law, 2015-2016
112.Anshumali Nilesh, MSc Mathematics and Foundations of Computer Science, 2015-16
113.Abhilasha Joshi, DPhil Neuroscience, 2013-2017
114.Udit Bhatia, DPhil Political Theory, 2014- 17
115.Santanu Bhattacharya, Master of Public Policy, 2015-2016
116.Arindam Banerjee, Master of Public Policy, 2015-16
117.Faraz Janan, DPhil Engineering, 2014
118.Nicholas Letchford, DPhil Mathematics, 2013-2016
119.Sunniva Melhuus, MPhil Politics, 2014-16
120.Judith Dada, MSc Social Science of the Internet
121.Gayathri Balan, Master of Business Administration, 2015-2016
122.Dhruti Babariya, DPhil Obstetrics and Gynaecology, 2013-17
123.Tariq Parker, Msc Neuroscience, 2015-16
124.Richard Kendall, MPhil Classical Archaeology, 2014-16
125.Kayla Svoboda, MPhil in Development Studies, 2016
126.Josephine Mahony, DPhil Environmental Sciences, 2015-2019
127.HF Ryan DPhil Archaeology
128.Nicole Beardsworth MSc African Studies 2012/13
129.Eden Bailey, MSt Musicology, 2015-16
130.Shalmalee Ghate MPhil Development Studies, 2016-17
131.Anna Baird, Lit Hum BA, 2017
132.Md Adil Hossain, DPhil International Development, 2014
133.Min Zha, MSc Education, 2015
134.Ayush Ranjan, MSc. in Contemporary India, 2015-16
135.Indigo Hope Wilde, BFA Fine Art, 2014
136.Chandrashekar Madaiah, MSc Physics, 2002-2005
137.Arthur (Eirich), MPhil Social Anthropology, 2015-16
138.Matthew Eric Garret, MPhil 2015
139.Devanshi Shah, CS Exec, B.Com
140.Aneil Jaswal, DPhil Public Health, 2016
141.Shrochis Karki, DPhil International Development (2011-2015)
142.Vanshica Kant (M.St Global & Imperial History, 2013-14)
143.Ankita Pandey D. Phil Candidate
144.Sa'eed Husaini, DPhil International Development, 2015
145.Sahana Ghosh, MPhil Migration Studies, 2008-10
146.Aranyani Bhargav, Msc Contenporary India, 2009-10
147.Ayudh Reyaz , M.Arch , 2012-17
148.Shagun Gupta/MSc Global Governance and Diplomacy/2014-2015
149.Zakir Hossain Majumder, Grad Student (PhD), Interdisciplinary Humanities, University of California, Merced
150.Dhvani Mehta (Bachelor of Civil Law, 2010; M.Phil Law, 2011; D.Phil Candidate Law)
151.Bhumi Purohit, MSc Contemporary India 2014-2015
152.Akanksha Awal, D.Phil (Anthropology) 2014
153.Swati Janu, MSUD, 2013-15
154.Diwita Mathivanan; MA History 2015-Present
155.Ratika Yumnam, MSc Contemporary India 2013-2014
156.Gayeti Singh (Msc Contemporary South Asian Studies) (2009-10)
157.Ankana Das, MA English 2016
158.Mezna Qato (DPhil History)
159.Nirad Vidrohi/MA, Development, 2015-2017
160.VRO Student 2014-2015
161.Gael Sirello, VRO BA PPE, 2014-2015
162.Sakshi, B.C.L. (2014-15)
163.James Nottage, BA History & Politics (2010), MSc Contemporary India (2014)
164.Lakshmee Sharma, MSc Social Anthropology 2014-15
165.Saurabh Mishra DPhil History (2005-08)
166.Fergus Peace, BPhil Philosophy 2015-7
167.Konpal Kaur Mphil archaeology 2015-17
168.Prerona Prasad, Modern History Department
169.Ilunga Mpyana, Master of Public Policy, 2015-2016
170.Abigail Desmond, MPhil Archaeology, 2015-2017
171.Jaskiran Chohan, MSc Latin American Studies, Latin America Centre, 2013-2014
172.Amaal Akhtar, Msc Contemporary India, 2014-15
173.Debasmita Deb, PhD student, Women's Studies, 2013
174.Vanya Vaidehi Bhargav, D.Phil History, (2013-)
175.Anica Mann-Kapur, Mphil Classical Indian Religion, 2013-15
176.Lofred Madzou, MSc in Social Science of the Internet (2015-2016)
177.Arijeet Pal (Research Fellow, Theoretical Physics)
178.Raag Yadava (MPhil, Law, 2015-16)
179.Joe Hayns-Worthington Dphil Anthropology 2011-2016
180.Anisha Gururaj, MSc in Global Governance and Diplomacy, 2016.
181.Corinne Cattekwaad, Alumni (MSc in Social Science of the Internet) 2014 - 15
182.Jem Jones, CAAH Classics, 2013-16
183.Amar Sohal (DPhil. History, 2015-18)
184.Musab Younis, DPhil International Relations, 2013-16
185.Kiran Benipal, Literae Humaniores, 2018-19
186.Farheen Ahmed (BA, jurisprudence; 2014-17)
187.Dalia Gebrial, MSt. World Literatures, 2015-2016
188.Vivian Holmes, MMathPhil Mathematics & Philosophy 2013-17
189.Lucy Hirst, BA Classics 2014-2015
190.Aliya Yule, PPE, 2017
191.Priyanka deSouza MSc Environmental Change and Management 2013
192.Madeleine Norman, Classics, 2013-18
193.Tim Pfefferle, MSc Global Governance and Diplomacy, Department for International Development, 2016
194.T Khaitan, Bachelor of Civil Law, 2004
195.Jacob Armstrong BA English and Modern Language (GER), 2014
196.Mili Malde, Classics, BA Classics, 3rd year
197.Vinayak Uppal MSc. Economics for Development, 2009
198.Kate Tunstall, Faculty (Modern Languages)
199.Mihika Chatterjee, DPhil, 2015
200.Gil Chambers, Materials Science, Department of Materials, 1st
201.Arushi Garg, D Phil in Law,
202.Yasser Shams Khan, DPhil English, 2015-2019
203.Tanyah Hameed, MPhil Comparative Social Policy, Dept of Social Policy and Intervention
204.S Iravani, BA. English
205.David Bowe, DPhil, Medieval and Modern Languages
206.Nils Rochowicz, MPhil Economics 2015
207.Sachin Croker, BA English Language and literature, 2013
208.Nazmus Tareque, Bachelor of Civil Law, 2015-16
209.Nomfundo Ramalekana, Bachelor of Civil Law, 2015-2016
210.Kristin Grogan, DPhil English, 2014
211.Ananthi Al Ramiah, DPhil Experimental Psychology, 2009
212.Lindsay Lee (Master of Public Policy 2015)
213.Chi Chi Shi, MPhil. Political Theory, 2nd year
214.Ndjodi Ndeunyema (Bachelor of Civil Law) 2015/2016
215.Divyanshi Chugh (MSc. Comparative Social Policy, Department of Social Policy), Batch 2014-2015
216.Simukai Chigudu, DPhil in International Development, 2016
217.Felix Binder, DPhil Physics
218.Benjamin Abraham, DPhil Public Policy. year 1
219.Ela Naegele, MSc. Political Theory, 2014
220.Rebecca Dixon, MPhil in Development Studies 2012-2014
221.Namratha Rao, DPhil English 2015 - 2018
222.Arev Papazian, MPhil. Social Anthropology, 2015-2016
223.Sanchari Dutta, DPhil History, 2007
224.Aidan Hocking, MSt. Global and Imperial History, 2014-15
225.Geoffrey Yeung, Bachelor of Civil Law, 2016
226.Marc Shi Msc. Social Policy and Intervention
227.Bernard Soubry, M.Phil in Environmental Change and Management, 2015
228.Rui Barbosa (Research Assistant, Computer Science)
229.Kirti Mahapatra, Bachelor of Civil Law, 2012-13
230.Alba Kapoor BA History and Politics
231.Kate Nussenbaum, MSc. (Res) Experimental Psychology, 2017
232.Emily Blease, MPhil Anthropology
233.Simon-Chevarie-Cossette, DPhil. Philosophy, 2014
234.Max Harris, Bachelor of Civil Law and Master of Public Policy (2012-2014)
235.Samuel Demharter, DPhil Computer Science, 4th year
236.Swathi Swaminathan, MSc Psychological Research
237.Raphael Chaskalson, MSc in Economic and Social History, 2015/16
238.Ritika Tewari, MSc. Global Governance and Diplomacy, 2015
239.Sujit Thomas, MPhil Modern British and European History 2012-14
240.Ntokozo Qwabe (MSc. African Studies, 2016)
241.Eleonora Serra, MSt. Linguistics, year 2013-2014
242.Arwa Awan, Visiting Undergrad, History and Politics
243.Elizabeth Dann, BA, Medieval and Modern Languages, 3rd year
244.Marija Pantelic, DPhil Social Policy and Intervention, 2013
245.Vanessa Gerber [MSc Environmental Change & Management]
246.Jack Doyle, DPhil History, 2017
247.Prateek Jain (Masters of Business Administration, 2016)
248.Salmoli Choudhuri, Bachelor of Civil Law, 2015-16
249.Ms. Ranu Sinha, M.Phil in Geography and the Environment, Department of Geography and the Environment, October 2014 - 2016
250.Vindhya Srinivasamani, Bachelor of Civil Laws, 2012-13
251.Anirudh Mathur, BA Hons PPE, 2014
252.Anupama Kumar, Bachelor of Civil Law (2013-14) and MSt Archaeology (2014-15)
253.Alex Diwa, DPhil Clinical Medicine
254.Vikaran Khanna, DPhil. Physics, 2010
255.Matt Broomfield, BA English Language & Literature, 2015
256.Abhishek Bhattacharyya. B.A. English Language and Literature. Christ Church. Matriculation: 2009.
257.Ayyaz Mallick, MBiochem, Alumnus Oriel College
258.Sanober Umar, MSc Anthropology and International Development
259.Chandrika Prasad Verma, PhD., Centre of Social Medicine and Community Health JNU
260.Aditi Vyas, MSc. History of Science, Medicine and Technology, Wellcome Unit for the History of Medicine, 2007
261.Marisa Macari, DPhil Anthropology, 2013
262.Arbind K Chaudhary
263.Shruthi, History, First Year
264.Nora Bardelli, DPhil International Development, 2014
265.Richard Toppo MSc. Contemporary India 2013
266.Sarabe Chan (MA Poverty and Development, IDS) 2015-16
267.Alexandra Reza, MPhil. International Relations, 2015
268.Kalina Naidoo, Masters by Research in Psychiatry, Department of Psychiatry, 1st Year.
269.Drasko Kascelan, MSc Applied Linguistics and Second Language Acquisition, Department of Education, 2014
270.Jess Rahman MSt Women's Studies
271.Ryan Daniels, DPhil Zoology, 2015
272.Kate Stewart, BA English, 2nd Year
273.Madalina Ciocanu, Anthropology, 2017
274.charlotte Linton, Mphil Visual, Material and Museum Anthropology, 2016
275.Rosie Fraser BA Spanish and Portuguese First Year
276.Nils Karl Reimer, MSc in Psychological Research, 2014
277.Shohini Sengupta, MSc in Law and Finance, 2015
278.Fadiah Nadwa, Mst International Human Rights Law, 2015
279.Crea O'Hanlon MPhil Russian and East European Studies
280.Zheng Guan, MSt. Global and Imperial History, 2015/6
281.Chris Whitehouse, BA History & Politics, First Year
282.Lucy Graham, D.Phil., graduated 2011
283.Tyler Journeaux Graham, M.St. Philosophical Theology, Department of Theology and Religion, first year (2015-2016)
284.Anwesha Sengupta, MPhil. Modern South Asian Studies
285.Sarah Bufkin, DPhil in Politics
286.Alex MacFarlane, DPhil Oriental Studies 2019
287.Amaal Akhtar, MSc. Contemporary India (2015)
288.Jennifer van Leijen-Cowasji Alumni of Utrecht University and the University of East London
289.Emma Brunskill-Powell, MSc Comparative Social Policy, 2016
290.Shahnawaz Ali Raihan, Dphil in History (2013-16)
Student Societies and Institutions
291.Rhodes Must Fall
292.Corpus Christi College Equal Opportunities Committee
293.Oxford University Student Union's Campaign for Racial Awareness and Equality
5. Statement in support of the teaching and student community of Jawaharlal Nehru University (by Japanese scholars working on India)
(This statement is issued in our individual capacities, and does not represent the opinion of any institution.)
We, the undersigned members from various educational, research and teaching institutions in Japan are deeply concerned and disturbed by the recent situation in Jawaharlal Nehru University.
As a premier institution of learning in the world, JNU has made very significant contributions to teaching and research. It has research collaborations with academic institutions all over the world, and is celebrated as an important and vibrant space for critical thinking and democratic expression. Unfortunately in consequence of recent events these values, collaborations, and the reputation of Jawaharlal Nehru University appear to be under threat.
In this difficult hour, we request the Indian government to uphold the freedom of speech that is essential to any national institution of Higher Education and ask that they endeavour to ensure the continued autonomy and functioning of the University.
Signatures:
- Rohan D’Souza, Associate Professor, Graduate School of Asian and African Area Studies, Kyoto University
- Akio Tanabe, Professor, Graduate School of Asian and African Area Studies, Kyoto University
- Aya Ikegame, Associate Professor, Institute for Advanced Studies on Asia, the University of Tokyo
- Etsuro Ishigami, Professor, Faculty of Commerce, Fukuoka University
- Fumiko Oshikawa, Japanese Association of South Asian Studies, Emeritus Professor, Kyoto University
- Kazuya Nakamizo, Associate Professor, Graduate School of Asian and African Area Studies, Kyoto University
- Ines G. Zupanov, Professor/Director, Centre d'etudes de l'Inde et Asie du Sud (CNRS-EHESS), Paris (currently visiting professor at Institute for Advanced Studies on Asia, the University of Tokyo)
- Jun Obi, Lecturer, The Faculty of Intenational Relations, Daitobunka University
- Ayumu, Yasutomi, Professor, Institute for Advanced Studies on Asia, the University of Tokyo
- Kyoko Matsukawa, Associate Professor, Faculty of Letters, Konan University
- Atsushi Kato, Professor, School of Business, Aoyama Gakuin University
- Tsukasa, Mizushima, Professor, Graduate School of Humanities and Sociology, Tokyo University
- Sae Nakamura, Research Associate, Graduate School of Asian and African Area Studies, Kyoto University
- Yu Sasaki, Independent Scholar.
- Heiji Nakamura, Emeritus Professor, Tokyo University of Foreign Studies
- Mari Miyamoto, Newton Fellow, SOAS South Asia Institute, SOAS
- Makiko Kimura, Associate Professor, Department of International and Cultural Studies, Tsuda College
- Kenta Funahashi, Research Associate, Center for the Study of Contemporary India, Ryukoku University
6. Statement of solidarity by Noam Chomsky, Orhan Pamuk, and others
We have learnt of the shameful act of the Indian government which, invoking sedition laws formulated by India’s colonial rulers, ordered the police to enter the Jawaharlal Nehru University campus and unlawfully arrest a student leader, Mr. Kanhaiya Kumar, on charges of inciting violence --without any proof whatever of such wrongdoing on his part.
From the reports of a large number of witnesses and the most highly respected journalists in the country, these are the known facts that no impartial observer denies: In a student meeting, acting well within the rights he possesses by the law of the land, Mr. Kumar spoke critically of the BJP government’s policies. On the previous day, at some other event which he had no part in organising and at which he did not speak, a handful of other students, not even identifiable as students of the university, were shouting slogans about the rights of Kashmiris to independence from Indian military oppression over the last many decades. Mr. Kumar, whose speech (widely available on a video) cannot in any way be connected with the slogans uttered on the previous day, was nonetheless arrested for ‘anti-national’ behaviour and for violating the sedition laws against the incitement to violence. Since there is no evidence to establish these charges, we can only conclude that this arrest is further evidence of the present government’s deeply authoritarian nature, intolerant of any dissent, setting aside India’s longstanding commitment to toleration and plurality of opinion, replicating the dark times of an oppressive colonial period and briefly of the Emergency in the mid-1970s.
These actions of the police have brought great dishonour to the government; and the failure of the Vice-Chancellor to speak out against these actions and moreover to allow the suspension of seven other students on charges that have not been established by a fair and transparent inquiry, will bring great dishonour to the most prominent university in the country in the eyes of the academy all over the world.
We, the undersigned, take a stand of heartfelt solidarity with the students and faculty of Jawaharlal Nehru University in their efforts to resist these developments on its campus and, in the name of the liberties that India and Indian universities until recently could take for granted, we not only condemn the culture of authoritarian menace that the present government in India has generated, but urge all those genuinely concerned about the future of India and Indian universities to protest in wide mobilisation against it.
Signed by:
- Noam Chomsky, Emeritus Professor of Linguistics and Philosophy, Massachusetts Institute of Technology, USA
- Orhan Pamuk, Nobel Laureate, Turkey
- Jonathan Cole, Former Provost of Columbia University, USA
- Judith Butler, Professor of Linguistics, University of California, Berkeley
- Richard N. Zare, Professor of Chemistry, Stanford University, USA
- Robert Wade, Professor of International Development, London School of Economics, UK
- Akeel Bilgrami, Professor of Philosophy, Columbia University, USA
- Dimitri Papadimitriou, Director, Levy Institute, Bard College, USA
- Mriganka Sur, Professor of Neuroscience, Massachusetts Institute of Technology, USA
- Jan Breman, Emeritus Professor of Sociology, Amsterdam University, The Netherlands,
- Sanat Kumar, Professor of Chemical Engineering, Columbia University, USA
- Sheldon Pollock, Professor of Sanskrit, Columbia University, USA
- Barbara Harriss-White, Emerita Professor of Development Studies, Oxford University, UK
- Partha Chatterjee, Professor of Anthropology, Columbia University, USA.
- N. V. Ramana, Professor of Physics, Princeton University, USA
- James Galbraith, Professor of Economics, University of Texas at Austin, USA
- Charles Taylor, Emeritus Professor of Philosophy, McGill University, Canada
- Servaas Storm, Professor of Economics, Delft University of Technology, The Netherlands
- Arjun Appadurai, Professor of Media, Culture and Communication, New York University, USA.
- Alicia Puyana Mutis, Professor of Economics, Flacso, Mexico.
- Robert Pollin, Professor of Economics, University of Amherst at Massachusetts, USA
- Juan Carlos Moreno Brid, Professor of Economics, Universidad National de Mexico, USA
- Gerald Epstein, Professor of Economics, University of Amherst at Massachusetts, USA
- Pasuk Phongpaichit, Emerita Professor, Chulalongkorn University, Bangkok Thailand.
- Kanti Rai, leading leukemia specialist, USA
- Gauri Vishwanathan, Professor of English, Columbia University, USA
- Ha-Joon Chang, University of Cambridge, UK
- Jennie Traschen, Professor of Physics, University of Massachusetts at Amherst, USA
- David Kastor, Associate Head of Department of Physics, University of Massachusetts at Amherst, USA
- Ugo Pagano, Professor of Economics, Università degli Studi di Siena, Italy
- Mira Nair, Film Director
- Ozlem Onaran, Professor of Economics, University of Greenwich, UK
- Engelbert Stockhammer, Professor of Economics, University of Bristol, UK
- Gary Dymski, Professor of Applied Economics, University of Leeds, UK
- Arjun Jayadev, University of Massachusetts, Boston, USA.
- Elissa Braunstein, Colorado State University, USA
- Alicia Giron, Universidad National de Mexico, USA
- Daniele Tori, University of Greenwich, UK
- Pablo Bortz, Universirty of San Martin, Beunos Aires, Argentina
- Daniela Gabor, UWE Bristol, UK
- Annina Kaltenbrunner, University of Leeds, UK
- J.George Waardenburg, Emeritus professor in development economics at Erasmus University, Rotterdam, The Netherlands.
- Fernando J. Cardim de Carvalho, Emeritus Professor, Federal University of Rio de Janeiro
- Mario Tonveronachi, Università degli Studi di Siena, Italy
- Jan Kregel, Director of Research, Levy Institute, Bard College, USA
- Thomas Ferguson, University of Massachusetts, Boston, USA
- Malcolm Sawyer, Emeritus Professor of Economics, University of Leeds, UK
- Thea Harvey-Barratt, Levy Institute, Bard College, USA
- Amrita Chhachhi, International Institute of Social Studies, The Hague Netherlands
- Noemi Levy, Universidad National de Mexico, USA
- Ilhan Dogus, University of Hamburg, Germany
- Edward Fullbrook, Executive Director, World Economics Association
- Brendan Burchell, University of Cambridge, UK
- Vamsi Vakulabharanam, Professor of Economics, University of Amherst at Massachusetts, USA
- Sripad Motiram, University of Massachusetts at Bosto, USA
- Stefano Zambelli, Universita di Trento, Italy
- Andrew B. Tylecote, Emeritus Professor, University of Sheffield, UK
- Jing Cai, University of Aberdeen, Scotland
- Julian Wells, Kingston University, UK
- Mehmet Kerem Coban, Lee Kuan Yew Institute of Public Policy, National University of Singapore
- Andres Lazzarini, University of San Martin, Argentina
- Radha Upadhyaya, University of Nairobi, Kenya
- Riccardo Bellofiors, Universita di Bergamo, Italy
- Carolina Alves, University of London
- Pritam Singh, Oxford Brookes University, UK
- Stephanie Seguino, University of Vermont, USA
- Nicolas Pons-Vignon, EHSS, Paris
- Sergio Cesarotto, Universita di Siena, Italy
- Tomas Rotta, University of Greenwich, UK
- Robin Blackburn, Cullman Fellow, New York Public Library
- David Freedberg, Director, Warburg Institute, University of London
- Mario Seccareccia, University of Ottowa, Canada
- Jens Lerche, University of London, UK
- Kevin Gallagher, Boston University, USA
- Maria Cristina Marcuzzo, Università di Roma "La Sapienza", Italy
- Pascal Petit, University of Sorbonne, Paris France
- Deepankar Basu, University of Massachusetts, Amherst, USA.
- María Cecilia Ainciburu, Università degli Studi di Siena, Italy
- Eugenia Correa, Universidad Nacional de Mexico, Mexico City
- Wendy Olsen, Professor of Socio-Economics, University of Manchester, UK
- Radhika Balakrishnan, Rutgers University, USA
- Eduardo Strachman, Sao Paulo State University, Brazil
- Wesley Colin Marshall, Universidad Autónoma Metropolitana, Iztapalapa, Mexico
- Trevor Evans, Berlin School of Economics and Law, Germany
- Terrence McDonough, National University of Ireland, Galway
- Rod O’Donnell, University of Sydney, Australia
7. Stanford University extends solidarity to JNU
We, the undersigned students, alumni, and faculty of Stanford University, stand in solidarity with students and faculty of JNU. We strongly condemn the unconstitutional and undemocratic arrest of Kanhaiya Kumar and the continuing police action on the JNU campus. We demand that the government release Kanhaiya Kumar immediately, and drop all charges against him. We demand the cessation of all legal proceedings against Umar Khalid, Rama Naga, Anant Prakash, Ashutosh Kumar and Anirban Bhattacharya, and that they be provided security against the violence of the Hindu Right.
During the past week, we followed the state's use of archaic colonial laws of sedition to clamp down on political dissent. We were dismayed by the JNU administration's complicity in allowing the police to enter campus and search hostels goes against the autonomy of the university, which was designed precisely to ensure freedom of political dissent. The continuing action by the JNU administration against students reveals their complicity with the Hindu Right. The Indian mass media's demonisation of student political activity has not only carried and propagated the state's autocratic brief, but has granted legitimacy to the ensuing violence against students. The subsequent attacks on students and faculty at the Patiala House court by goons dressed as lawyers confirmed the nexus between the state, Hindu Right, and administrative bodies (such as the one at JNU university).
The events at JNU are not unique. They are one amongst a series of larger attempts to curb freedoms, by outlawing political organizations including those on campus, as well as slowly undermine central educational institutions which accelerates the shift towards privatisation of education. In Kanhaiya Kumar's arrest on the ludicrous charge of sedition, we hear echoes of the temporary derecognition of the Ambedkar-Periyar Study Circle at IIT-Madras, and the institutional murder of Rohith Vemula. In those instances too, we saw the presence of the state-Hindu Right-university nexus that curbed political freedom.
As our friends at the University of Chicago noted in their solidarity statement, the nationalism advocated by the Hindu Right is predicated on imagining an enemy. “Its political program imagines the citizen as upper caste, heterosexual, male, Hindu; its economic program necessitates a blind faith in neoliberalism; and its social program continually imagines an enemy – the Muslim, the Dalit, the Left.” It is this imagined “enemy” of the Hindu Right that faces the risk of being labelled “anti-national” every time there is political dissent. We protest the actions of the present BJP government because we do not agree with them that only upper-caste heterosexual, Hindu men are entitled to citizenship rights. This is a dire situation for us, the citizens of India, that demands we rally around the specific case of JNU even as we resist the larger project of the Hindu Right. We would do well to bear in mind Kanhaiya Kumar's reminder that “we don’t need a certificate of patriotism from the RSS.”
As students and teachers, we value above all freedom of thought and action. We cherish the space for critical thinking, open discourse and political dissent that universities offer. Opening up room for disagreement and the free flow of ideas is not a by-product of the educational process, but its very essence.
We, the undersigned students, alumni, and faculty of Stanford University, stand in solidarity with the students and faculty of JNU.
Signed by:
- Megha Patnaik, PhD Student, Department of Economics
- Mayukh Samanta, MS&E alumnus, Class of 2015
- Jisha Menon, Associate Professor and Director of Undergraduate Studies, Dept. of Theater and Performance Studies
- Vivek V. Narayan, Graduate Student, Dept. of Theater and Performance Studies
- Thomas Blom Hansen, Reliance-Dhirubhai Ambani Professor in South Asian Studies and Professor in Anthropology; Director, Stanford’s Center for South Asia
- Sadhana Senthilkumar, Undergraduate Student
- Rush Rehm, Professor, Dept. of Theater and Performance Studies, and Classics; and Artistic Director, Stanford Repertory Theater (SRT)
- Trisha Shetty, Undergraduate Student
- Shiv Vadivelalagan, Dept. of International Policy Studies
- Anunay Kulshrestha, Undergraduate Student
- Luladay Price, Undergraduate Student
- Anubha Anushree, Dept. of History
- Japsimran Kaur, Undergraduate Student
- Milind Rao, Graduate student, Department of Electrical Engineering
- Adeel Arif, MS, MS&E '12
- Asha Chigurupati, Stanford Alumnus, Class of 2015
- Melanie Rodrigues, Postdoctoral Scholar, Department of Surgery
8. Letter of solidarity with JNU students and faculty from professionals, academics and artists in West Bengal
The recent forceful and spectacular big-media injunction on debating and ‘intellectualising’ issues of nationhood and its summary recommendation of the strict enforcement of executive police rule as substitute of such debate has probably been etched deep in the minds of many a primetime news-viewer in our country. We, the undersigned, are writing this note to strongly disagree with this unsolicited injunction that seeks to exorcise all oppositional opinion and thus fundamentally imperils the practice of democracy in this country. This attempt at curbing strains of opposition lies also at the heart of the recent chain of reactions of the ruling coalition and the central government to a purportedly “cultural programme” which was to be held at JNU on the 9th of February to publicly discuss the question of Kashmiri self-determination. What follows in this note hopes to vindicate our right but also our duty to hold such oppositional views and presents our claims and demands concerning the recent series of events surrounding JNU.
As stated time and again, the intention of the students organising the event of 9th February was to continue the discussions and debates on Kashmir’s political character and on the morality of capital punishment in a civilised nation. We find the alarmism surrounding this event both after and before it was going to be held to be motivated by a sinister design. The sustenance of such debates in the public discourse of the nation-state is of course only to be expected as they were initiated by none other than the founding figures of the nation and the republic – Ambedkar, Gandhi, Tagore and Nehru. The central government’s decades-long policy of governing the region through a draconian law like the AFSPA is at odds with the basic principles of democracy and federalism. But the imposition of AFSPA also by itself draws attention to Kashmir’s specific status within the Indian union. The consequent circumstances of instability and mass discontent in the region provoke us constantly to interrogate the ‘mainstream’ nationalist resolution of the ‘Kashmir question’, especially because ‘Kashmir’ erupts and raises its ‘problematic’ head not so infrequently through news of militancy and militarism in our everyday life. Moreover, when school textbooks of history and political science in India still present Kashmir as a ‘problem’, it should not come as a surprise that the students of a premier university of the nation would also want to engage with this ‘problem’ in their own capacities.
In more recent times, no matter what its scale, the tumult in the public sphere after Afzal Guru’s hanging in 2013 re-invoked this already-existing public discourse. More recently, the ultra-nationalist organisations of our country such as the RSS/BJP have made their wish clear many a time to revoke the special status of Kashmir accorded by the article 370 of the Indian Constitution. Historically speaking, this is a view that does not enjoy the unanimous support of even the country’s political elite, let alone the masses, as for instance, Nehru himself repeatedly agreeing to the demand for a referendum on Kashmir. One must in such a situation ask under what circumstances the Indian nation-state acceded to the demand for a referendum on the question of self-determination of Kashmir at different conjunctures. Also, what made it backtrack from such a fundamental enunciation of popular sovereignty as a referendum that has been in wide practice the world over and most recently in United Kingdom and Scotland. Such more immediate circumstances clearly compel us to argue for keeping the debate concerning Kashmir alive in our public life. One may or may not support the Kashmiri demand for self-determination, but we do no doubt that the nation-state must at least acknowledge and accommodate the debates on this issue and has been doing so in certain ways for a long time now. How is it possible then to incriminate as ‘seditious’ the efforts by the concerned students at JNU to retrieve some such apparently forgotten questions of our democracy and rearticulate them in the current context of majoritarian assertions all over the nation?
We thus opine that the concerned JNU students were trying nothing exceptional but to continue to practice critical thinking about these problems inherent in the foundational structures of the nation-state in the form of a public programme. We affirm strongly both their rights as well as their intentions in doing so.
What seems to have become inextricably entangled with this latest version of public engagement with the ‘Kashmir debate’ is the problem of branding the ‘anti-national’. Not the greatest retrospection is required to perceive that this impromptu classificatory schema is of course not limited to debating the Kashmir issue. It goes well beyond that and has been shown in reports and opinions circulating about JNU to include beef-eating, ‘queer’ sexualities, dalit forms of worship, secular atheist thinking, advocacy of tribal rights and myriad other things. Such practices and opinions are being termed ‘anti-national’ even as the government seeks to allot and sell substantial national resources to big multi-national corporations and while the ruling party’s allies celebrate the spirit of Nathuram Godse, the murderer of the ‘Father of the Nation’.
The only ‘national’ or the ‘nationalist’ permitted and promoted by the ruling ideology of the BJP/RSS is the patriarchal-Brahmanical-upper class and all other forms which do not subscribe to this ideology are to be labelled, hunted, surveilled and ‘put down’ as ‘anti-nationals’ or even ‘terrorists’. The BJP leader who has been seen on camera thrashing and abusing the JNU professors and journalists at the Patiala Court, has justified his actions as ‘teaching a strict lesson to the anti-nationals’ and argued that the ‘anti-nationals’ should not only be beaten up, but there is no harm in killing them too! We condemn such heinous statements and provocations to mob-violence against the critics of the BJP/RSS and the current central government. To us, these statements seem more than empty threats at a time when M.M. Kalburgi, Gobind Pansare, Narendra Dabholkar, Rohith Vemula and Soni Sori – all faces of dissent – have indeed been murdered or harmed by ‘nationalist’ saffron terrorists.
It then seems quite apparent to us that the use of the term ‘anti-national’ is the highest point of a frantic drive for Brahmanical cultural homogenisation of the nation by the BJP/RSS/ABVP. All difference and even the minimal articulation of dissent are now gradually being brought into the ambit of the ‘anti-national’ category. Added to this is the categorical denial of evidence and information rights by the highest offices of the country that is making ‘anti-national’ a surprisingly self-evident category beyond any interpretation. Thus the Home Ministry, in direct collusion often with certain big media channels has been of late firing a battery of baseless charges against university students most irresponsibly. This is lending further legitimacy and incitement to the quite well-organised mobocracy of the extended Sangh Parivar. The latter is quite easily finding further inspiration to disrupt essential legal procedures in courts and deal with ‘anti-nationals’ as they deem ‘fit’. This tactic of intimidation is duplicated by none other than the law enforcing agency i.e. the police. It is little wonder then that the National Human Rights Commission has already found out that a written statement made by Kumar in court was produced under pressure from the police. This brings back memories of Afzal Guru’s own confession that is claimed by some to have been extracted under duress by law enforcement.
In such circumstances, we would like to register our strong criticism of the most conceited ideological use of the term ‘anti-national’ in media and by the state to imbue images, videos and information with an immediacy of a judgment, thoroughly unfounded in most cases and leading up to direct forms of intimidation of dissenters with exemplary impunity. Within this kind of conceited use of the term ‘anti-national’ is embedded once again, an urgency to dismantle precisely those very pillars of public debate that lend strength to our democratic system and culture.
Recent events at JNU have also compelled us to contemplate on a much bigger question. For the Delhi police, a section of media, BJP/RSS – both the government executives and party leaders – and ABVP the act of organising a debate on Afzal Guru’s hanging in itself is an ‘anti-national’ act because it ‘questioned’ the decision finalised by the Supreme Court, the highest judicial body of the nation-state. In this context, we ask the following: Is having a difference of opinion with the apex court necessarily a ‘contempt of court’ even in strictly legal terms? Can such differing opinion be branded as ‘anti-national’ simply by way of its divergence from the court’s views? In a democracy, shouldn’t there be a space for debate on court verdicts too? Is it ‘anti-national’ or ‘anti-judiciary’ to extend the discourse on ‘justice’ beyond the immediate surroundings and formal networks of the judiciary? Does contemplating ‘justice’ in other forms and outside the arena of state-institutions always present a threat to ‘national sovereignty’ and are therefore to be declared ‘treason’?
In the context of increasing acts of ‘media trials’ orchestrated and ‘popular justice’ delivered, we want to strongly affirm that discussions and dialogues on the notion of ‘justice’, especially in respect to the question of ‘minority aspirations’, is utmost crucial for the future life of our democracy. All acts of ‘vengeance’ in the name of ‘justice’ must be condemned. Many eminent lawyers, scholars, Human Rights and civil society activists and Muslim clerics have questioned the gaping holes in the trial and appeal process of Afzal Guru as well as the gross violation of his constitutional rights and due legal processes in carrying out the punishment. One must not also forget here the absurdities of the present-day coalition politics of our nation: the so-called ‘nationalist’ BJP, which in Delhi is gunning for strong actions against the JNU students who organised the event in commemoration of the death of Afzal Guru and branding them ‘anti-nationals’, is in fact in an alliance with PDP in the Kashmir state assembly, the party which too eulogises Afzal Guru as a Kashmiri martyr! One must also take note of BJP’s silence on the issue of Balwant Singh Rajoana’s capital punishment – the Khalistani separatist who is accused for the 1995 assassination of the Punjab CM Beant Singh – against which another ally of them, the Akali Dal has already appealed!
We would like to further claim that the Judicial Process in India does not necessarily invite any kind of obvious foreclosure in its institutional functioning. Instead it fosters the potential for a certain degree of latitude in terms of appeals and amendments that are themselves co-dependent on the state of public debate in the country. We may debate on the most acceptable form of these debates or the style of their utterances, but we must never support the acts of forceful and even militarised suppressions or any kind of policing of them by the super-active executive with its totalitarian aspirations. These debates, we believe, aid in the process of strengthening institutions, procedures and meanings of justice. And it is in re-invoking this spirit of debate that we would want to register our own belief, however ‘fringe’ or ‘marginal’ that might sound: We are against the capital punishment – we do not think that a modern, civilised nation-state should have any legal right to kill its citizen, even if s/he is found to be engaged in ‘anti-national’ activities.
We want to also pose here one last important question thrown up by the events of the last few days – How can a nation-state ‘progress’ if it doesn’t keep amending its constitution according to changing circumstances and the demands of time and people? And how is that even possible without questioning the tenets of the existing constitution? Does that amount to being ‘anti-constitutional’? Then how is any change possible without being ‘anti-constitutional’ or ‘anti-national’? If so, aren’t many of the leaders of the ruling party also anti-nationals in as far as they want to revoke the special autonomous status of Kashmir granted by the Article 370 or argue in the parliament against the validity of the word ‘secular’ in Indian constitution as a descriptive character of the Indian nation-state. Leaving this question open here, let us clearly state our demands made in solidarity with the protesting teachers and students of JNU:
- Revoke all cases of sedition or otherwise against all students of JNU
- Revoke all disciplinary procedure and action against all students of JNU
- Restore normalcy for students living in JNU and outside
- Stop the witch-hunt of innocent students of Kashmiri and minority descent in Delhi and outside
- Priyankar Dey, Centre for Studies in Social Sciences, Calcutta
- Ritam Sengupta, Centre for Studies in Social Sciences, Calcutta
- Sayantan Saha Roy, University of Chicago
- Ritajyoti Bandyopadhyay, Centre for Studies in Social Sciences, Calcutta
- Iman Mitra, Mahanirban Calcutta Research Group
- Anwesha Sengupta. Mahanirban Calcutta Research Group and Jawaharlal Nehru University
- Sabyasachi Deb, Writer
- Ratna Deb, Retired school-teacher
- Asokendu Sengupta
- Ranabir Samaddar, Mahanirban Calcutta Research Group
- Paula Banerjee, University of Calcutta and Mahanirban Calcutta Research Group
- Moushumi Bhowmik, Singer and writer
- Neogi Sengupta, Barasat Government College
- Upal Chakrabarti, Presidency University
- Swati Chatterjee, Centre for Studies in Social Sciences, Calcutta
- Vikas Kumar Moola, Centre for Studies in Social Sciences, Calcutta
- Uday Bhanu Saini, Centre for Studies in Social Sciences, Calcutta
- Arunima Chakraborty, Centre for Studies in Social Sciences, Calcutta
- Richa Gupta, Centre for Studies in Social Sciences, Calcutta
- Chesta Arora, Centre for Studies in Social Sciences, Calcutta
- Rukmini Chakraborty, Centre for Studies in Social Sciences, Calcutta
- Anurupa Bhowmick, Centre for Studies in Social Sciences, Calcutta
- Tony Kurian, Centre for Studies in Social Sciences, Calcutta
- Santosh Sakhinala, Centre for Studies in Social Sciences, Calcutta
- Rajashree Bhattacharya, Centre for Studies in Social Sciences, Calcutta
- Debajyoti Mondal, Centre for Studies in Social Sciences, Calcutta
- Koyel Lahiri, Centre for Studies in Social Sciences, Calcutta
- Rohan Basu, Centre for Studies in Social Sciences, Calcutta
- Praskanva Sinharay, Centre for Studies in Social Sciences, Calcutta
- Ankur Tamuli Phukan, Centre for Studies in Social Sciences, Calcutta
- Arup Kumar Sen, Serampore College
- Subhadeep Sarker, Serampore College
- Jishnu Dasgupta, Serampore College
- Debajyoti Banerjee, Serampore College
- Sankha Das, Serampore College
- Moumie Banerjee, Serampore College
- Monideepa Bhattacharjee, Serampore College
- Samik Ray, Serampore College
- Arindam Dutta, Taki Government College
- Shubhankur Ghosh, Photographer
- Shan Bhattacharya, Researcher
- Antara Ray, Graphic designer
- Mimasa Pandit, St. Paul’s Cathedral Mission College
- Kaustubh Mani Sengupta, Bankura University
- Shrimoy Roy Chowdhury, Shiv Nadar University
- Anandaroop Sen, Jawaharlal Nehru University
- Twisha Deb, Photographer
- Ronny Sen, Photographer
- Arka Chattopadhyay, University of West Sydney
- Abhimanyu Kar, IIT Kharagpur
- Manjira Sinha, IIT Kharagpur
- Samata Biswas, Haldia Government College
- Shinjini Basu, Sir Gurudas Mahavidyalaya
- Debaditya Bhattacharya, Nibedita College
- Bhaskar Chaudhuri, Serampore College
- Nilanjan Chatterjee, Serampore College
- Saubhik Dasgupta, Serampore College
- Patrali Sinha, Serampore College
- Sharmita Dhar, Serampore College
- Suman Dutta, Serampore College
- Bidyut Banerjee, Serampore College
- Madhurilata Basu, Presidency University
- Rupsa Ray, Centre for Studies in Social Sciences, Calcutta and journalist
- Tista Das, West Bengal Education Service
- Saubhik Bandyopadhyay, West Bengal Education Service
9. Statement from academicians in Gujarat
We, members of the academic community of Gujarat, are extremely disturbed by the recent events in Jawaharlal Nehru University and the developments thereafter. We feel worried about the emerging dangers against the right to dissent and freedom of speech.
We believe that the disturbances in JNU including slogans against India could have been easily avoided without the moral policing by political forces. The demonstrations could have been patently handled by the vice chancellor - if necessary by setting up an internal committee to investigate. We firmly believe that the freedom of academic institutions is an essential condition for knowledge promotion and sharpening discourses, as academic institutions of higher learning are the embodiment of thought, science, creativity, knowledge and critique, and there cannot be an upfront limitation on their power to think and express. This freedom should not have been violated by the government or any outside forces.
We are shocked to watch the behaviour of the lawyers, who took the law in their hands and attacked students, teachers, journalists and even Supreme Court Panel members. Equally shocking was the behaviour of the Delhi Police, who supported lawyers by watching it as mute spectators. The misuse of the sedition law and outright violence of lawyers worry us, as they signal a great danger to our human rights and democratic values.
We demand impartial inquiry into the events that have taken place in JNU and in the Patiala House Court and punishment to the guilty when necessary.
We want that the right to speech and the right to dissent are ensured to all citizens of our country. Nationalism evolves gradually with the progress in democracy and growth of egalitarian society; and we believe that its interpretation should not be left to political parties. At the same time, free discussion on nationalism particularly in academic institutes must be encouraged.
Signed by:
Members of academic community of Gujarat (Date: February 22, 2016)
| Sr.No. | Designation | Name | Working at | Location |
| 1 | Prof. | AKASH ACHARYA | Center for Social Studies | Surat |
| 2 | Dr. | MUNISH ALAGH | Sardar Patel Institute of Economic and Social Research | Ahmedabad |
| 3 | Prof. | DINESHAWASTHI | Sardar Patel Institute of Economic and Social Research | Ahmedabad |
| 4 | Prof. | RAKESH BASANT | Indian Institute of Management | Ahmedabad |
| 5 | Dr. | GUARI BHARAT | CEPT University | Ahmedabad |
| 6 | Mr. | ARUP LAL CHAKRABORTY | Indian Institute of Technology | Gandhinagar |
| 7 | Mr. | ATANUCHATTERJEE | Center For Development Alternatives | Ahmedabad |
| 8 | Prof. | KESHAB DAS | Gujarat Institute of Development Research | Ahmedabad |
| 9 | Ms. | JIGNA DESAI | CEPT University | Ahmedabad |
| 10 | Prof. | KIRAN DESAI | Center for Social Studies | Surat |
| 11 | Dr. | RENU DESAI | CEPT University | Ahmedabad |
| 12 | Prof. | ERROL D'SOUZA | Indian Institute of Management | Ahmedabad |
| 13 | Dr. | SWETAGARG | Dhirubhai Ambani Institute of Information and Communication Technology | Gandhinagar |
| 14 | Dr. | AMRITA GHATAK | Gujarat Institute of Development Research | Ahmedabad |
| 15 | Prof. | SRUBABATI GOSWAMI | Physical Research Laboratory | Ahmedabad |
| 16 | Prof. | INDIRA HIRWAY | Center For Development Alternatives | Ahmedabad |
| 17 | Prof. | SUDARSHAN IYANGAR | Ahmedabad | |
| 18 | Prof. | SADAN JHA | Cetre For Social Studies | Surat |
| 19 | Dr. | KISHOR JOSE | Central University, Gandhinagar | Gandhinagar |
| 20 | Prof. | SATYAKAM'JOSHI | Center for Social Studies | Surat |
| 21 | Dr. | RUTUL JOSHI | CEPT University | Ahmedabad |
| 22 | Prof. | RITA KOTHARI | Indian Institute of Technology | Gandhinagar |
| 23 | Dr. | PRIYA RANJAN KUMAR | Central University Gandhinagar | Gandhinagar |
| 24 | Dr. | SHAILENDRA KUMAR | Central University Gandhinagar | Gandhinagar |
| 25 | Dr. | RINAKUMARI | Central University Gandhinagar | Gandhinagar |
| 26 | Dr. | SONY KUNJAPPAN | Central University Gandhinagar | Gandhinagar |
| 27 | Dr. | DARSHINI MAHADEVIA | CEPT University | Ahmedabad |
| 28 | Prof. | NITI MEHTA | Ahmedabad | |
| 29 | Dr. | RUDRA MAVAYAN MISHRA | Gujarat Institute of Development Research | Ahmedabad |
| 30 | Dr. | ATULMISHRA | Central University Gandhinagar | Gandhinagar |
| 32 | Dr | AMISHAL MODI | Dhirubhai Ambani Institute of Information and Communication Technology | Gandhinagar |
| 33 | Dr. | SIBA SANKAR MOHANTY | Central University Gandhinagar | Gandhinagar |
| 34 | Mr. | NAHAR MOHHAMED | Central University Gandhinagar | Gandhinagar |
| 35 | Prof. | SEBASTIAN MORRIS | Indian Institute of Management | Ahmedabad |
| 36 | Prof. | TARA NAIR | Gujarat Institute of Development Research | Ahmedabad |
| 37 | Prof. | R. PARTHASARATHY | Gujarat Institute of Development Research | Ahmedabad |
| 38 | Dr | Arjun Patel | Center for Social Studies | Surat |
| 39 | Dr. | JHARNA PATHAK | Gujarat Institute of Development Research | Ahmedabad |
| 40 | Dr. | MINAL PATHAK | CEPT University | Ahmedabad |
| 41 | Dr. | ITISHREE PATTNAIK | Gujarat Institute of Development Research | Ahmedabad |
| 43 | Prof. | K. R. RAMANATHAN | Physical Research Laboratory | Ahmedabad |
| 44 | Prof. | RAGHVANRANGARAJAN | Physical Research Laboratory | Ahmedabad |
| 45 | Dr. | ANIL KUMAR ROY | CEPT University | Ahmedabad |
| 46 | Prof. | C N RAY | CEPT University | Ahmedabad |
| 47 | Dr. | DHANANJAY RAI | Central University Gandhinagar | Gandhinagar |
| 48 | Dr. | ADITI NATHSARKAR | Dhirubhai Ambani Institute of Information and Communication Technology | Gandhinagar |
| 49 | Ms | SHACHI SANGHAVI | CEPT University | Ahmedabad |
| 50 | Prof. | AMITA SHAH | Center For Development Alternatives | Ahmedabad |
| 51 | Prof. | GHANSHAYAM SHAH | Center for Social and Development Study | Ahmedabad |
| 52 | Ms. | NEHA SHAH | L J Institute of management | Ahmedabad |
| 53 | Prof. | SHRUTI SHARMA | Indian Institute of Management | Ahmedabad |
| 54 | Prof. | SUKHPALSINGH | Indian Institute of Management | Ahmedabad |
| 55 | Ms. | MELISSA SMITH | CEPT University | Ahmedabad |
| 56 | Ms. | POOJA SUSANTHOMAS | Ahmedabad | |
| 57 | Prof. | JEEMOL UNNI | Institute of Rural Management, Anand | Anand |
| 58 | Prof. | PURNIMA VERMA | Indian Institute of Management | Ahmedabad |
| 50 | Dr. | P K VISHWANATHAN | Gujarat Institute of Development Research | Ahmedabad |
| 60 | Dr. | UMESH YADAV | Central University Gandhinagar | Gandhinagar |
| 61 | Dr | HEMANT KUMAR | Central University Gandhinagar | Gandhinagar |
| 62 | Ms | A ANUPAMA | Central University Gandhinagar | Gandhinagar |
| 63 | Dr | KHAIKHOLEN HAOKIP | Central University, Gandhinagar | Gandhinagar |
| 64 | Dr | BERYL ANAND | Central University, Gandhinagar | Gandhinagar |
| 65 | Dr | TULIKA TRIPATHI | Central University, Gandhinagar | Gandhinagar |
10. Canadian academics stand with JNU and student struggles in India
We, the undersigned, faculty and students at universities across Canada, wish to express our solidarity with the ongoing student struggle at Jawaharlal Nehru University in Delhi, India. In doing so, we wholeheartedly condemn the extra-constitutional detention of the JNU Students’ Union leader Kanhaiya Kumar and seven other students on February 9, 2016. Universities should be places of academic freedom where dissent and critical thinking must not only be tolerated but should be actively encouraged. The students who have been charged with sedition (a colonial-era relic that the Supreme Court of India itself has attempted to weaken) for questioning the Indian state’s controversial execution of Afzal Guru, the man accused in the attack on the Indian Parliament in 2001, breached no law, and are being illegally detained. Credible news reports from India’s leading television channels and newspapers have confirmed that the police action, and subsequent occupation of the university by police, was spurred on by the right-wing students group, the ABVP, that seems to have a direct line of influence with the ruling BJP in central government.
Since the February 9 incident, other students and faculty of JNU have been intimidated and beaten up, and journalists have been threatened and assaulted. Further exacerbating the attacks, on 15 February 2016, JNU students and faculty, along with at least ten journalists, were violently attacked by lawyers and a legislator from the ruling party when they were peacefully attending court in support of Kanhaiya Kumar’s hearing. All of this amounts to one of the most concerted and vicious projects of undermining not just one of India’s leading universities, but of creating a widespread culture of intolerance and state-sanctioned violence and orchestrating an assault on public education. The attack on JNU comes on the heels of what is being termed the institutional murder of Rohith Vemula, a dalit student at the University of Hyderabad, and the concerted attacks on dalit students there, also in the name of a manufactured patriotism in which any questioning of the state’s role in entrenching caste and class hegemony is rendered “anti-national”.
We want to assure the students, staff and faculty of JNU that they are not alone in their struggle. At Canadian universities, we are part of a growing global movement that seeks to condemn and resist the vicious attack on democratic norms, academic freedom and political dissent at JNU and in other universities globally.
(If you wish to add your name to this statement of support, please post a comment with your name, affiliation and location. We will update the post as more signatures come in. Thank you.)
1 Jayeeta Sharma, Associate Professor, University of Toronto
2 Rachel Berger, Associate Professor, Concordia University, Montreal QC Canada
3 Ishita Pande (JNU, 1999), Queen’s University, KIngston
4 Natalie Rothman, University of Toronto
5 Deborah Cowen, Department of Geography and Planning, University of Toronto
6 Ajay Rao, Associate Professor, University of Toronto
7 Prashant Keshavmurthy, Professor, Institute of Islamic Studies, McGill University, Montreal
8 Dr. Kristine Alexander, the University of Lethbridge
9 Raju J Das, Associate Professor, York University, Toronto
10 Andrea Marion Pinkney, McGill University, Montreal, QC
11 Rupinder Minhas, York University, Toronto
12 Rianne Mahon, Political Science, Wilfrid Laurier University, Waterloo, Ontario, Canada
13 Rabea Murtaza, Toronto
14 Nhung Tuyet Tran, University of Toronto
15 Sara Saljoughi, English & Cinema Studies, University of Toronto
16 Katharine N. Rankin, University of Toronto
17 Daniel White, Professor of English, University of Toronto
18 Margrit Eichler, Professor Emerita, OISE/UT
19 Lynne Viola, University Professor, University of Toronto
20 Bettina von Lieres, Centre for Critical Development Studies, UTSC
21 Prasad Khanolkar, University of Toronto, Canada
22 Chandler Davis, University of Toronto, Toronto
23 Francis Cody, University of Toronto, Toronto
24 Bhavani Raman, University of Toronto, Toronto
25 Neilesh Bose, University of Victoria, Victoria, BC, CANADA
26 Natalie Zemon Davis, University of Toronto, Toronto
27 Jens Hanssen, Depts of History and NMC, Toronto
28 Alejandro Paz, Anthropology, University of Toronto
29 Anup Grewal, University of Toronto
30 Dia Da Costa, University of Alberta
31 Rosa Sarabia, University of Toronto
32 Tong Lam, University of Toronto, Canada
33 Malini Guha, Carleton University
34 Laura Toth
35 Nicholas Sammond, University of Toronto, CANADA
36 Sanjeev Routray, University of British Columbia, Vancouver
37 Michael Lambek, FRSC, Professor of Anthropology, University of Toronto
38 Richard Roman, Sociology, Emeritus, University of Toronto, TORONTO
39 Dharashree Das, Simon Fraser University, Burnaby
40 Samar Nour, PhD Candidate, University of Toronto, Canada
41 Kari Dehli, Professor Emerita, University of Toronto
42 Katherine Blouin, University of Toronto, Toronto
43 Meghana Rao, University of Toronto
44 Kanishka Goonewardena, Department of Geography and Planning, University of Toronto
45 Kajri Jain, University of Toronto
46 Sheila L. Cavangh, Associate Professor, York University, Toronto, Canada.
47 Ruth Marshall, Associate Professor, Political Science, University of Toronto
48 Renisa Mawani, Associate Professor, University of British Columbia
49 Sara Shneiderman, University of British Columbia, Vancouver
50 Meenal Shrivastava, Professor Political Economy and Global Studies, Athabasca University
51 Sherene Razack, Professor, University of Toronto
52 Andrea Muehlebach, Associate Professor, Department of Anthropology, University of Toronto, Canada
53 Alexandre Da Costa, university of Alberta, Canada
54 Leslie Orr, Professor, Concordia University, Montreal
55 Ju Hui Judy Han, Assistant Professor in Department of Geography and Planning, University of Toronto
56 Parnisha Sarkar, PhD candidate, University of Toronto
57 Richard Sandbrook, Professor Emeritus of Political Science, University of Toronto
58 Kate Holland, Associate Professor, Dept of Slavic Langs and Lits, University of Toronto
59 Denise Reaume, Faculty of Law, University of Toronto, Canada
60 Michelle Murphy, History, University of Toronto
61 Charles Chiu
62 Elena Razlogova, Concordia University, Montreal
63 Roberta Buiani , University of Toronto
64 Firoza Elavia, York University, Toronto
65 Jack Quarter, University of Toronto
66 Amandeep Kaur Panag, York University, Toronto
67 Rajyashree N Reddy, Department of Geography and Planning, University of Toronto
68 Carla Nappi, University of British Columbia, Vancouver, BC
69 Vasuki Shanmuganathan, University of Toronto, Canada
70 Omar Sirri, PhD student, University of Toronto – Toronto, Canada
71 Sikata Banerjee, University of Victoria
72 Ozlem Aslan, University of Toronto, Toronto
73 David Seitz, Lecturer, University of Toronto
74 Nestor E. Rodriguez, Associate Professor, University of Toronto
75 D. Alissa Trotz, University of Toronto, Toronto
76 Reeju Ray, University of Western Ontario
77 Naisargi N. Dave, Associate Professor, Anthropology, University of Toronto
78 Anne-Emanuelle Birn, Professor, University of Toronto
79 Emily Gilbert, University of Toronto, Canada
80 Sam Walker, PhD Candidate, University of Toronto
81 Neera Singh, University of Toronto
82 Sevi Bayraktar, PhD student, University of California, Los Angeles
83 Professor Jody Berland, York University, Toronto, Canada
84 Bianca Dahl, University of Toronto
85 Shyam Ranganathan, Department of Philosophy, York University, Toronto
86 Christopher Webb, University of Toronto, Canada
87 Greg Albo, Political Science, York University, Toronto
88 Jaby Mathew, University of Toronto, Toronto
89 Justin GD, York University, Toronto
90 Shubhra Gururani, Associate Professor, Anthropolgy, York University, Toronto
91 Alan Sears, Sociology, Ryerson University, Toronto
92 Andre Sorensen, Professor, University of Toronto Scarborough
93 Arsalan Kahnemuyipour, Associate Professor of Linguistics, University of Toronto
94 Elizabeth Brule, York University, Toronto
95 Rahul Varma, playwright
96 Genevieve Mercier-Dalphond, McGill University, Montreal Canada
97 Zain R. Mian, McGill University, Montreal QC
98 Adrian Murray, University of Ottawa
99 Teresa Hubel, Huron University College, London, Ontario, Canada
100 Parastou Saberi, University of Toronto Scarborough, Toronto
101 Jennifer Chun, Sociology, University of Toronto Scarborough
102 Pasha M. Khan, McGill University, Montreal
103 Elliot Montpellier, McGill University
104 Tayyaba Jiwani, University of Toronto
105 Kevin Coleman, University of Toronto, Canada
106 Catherine Larouche, McGill University, Montreal, Canada
107 Nadir Khan, Law Student at McGill University, Montreal, Quebec
108 Meghant Sudan, Concordia University, Montreal
109 Yves Winter, McGill University, Montreal
110 Gavin Smith, Professor Emeritus, University of Toronto
111 Qamar Zaidi, York University, Canada.
112 Dominik Wujastyk, University of Alberta, Edmonton, Canada
113 Sanchia deSouza, University of Toronto, Toronto
114 Prasanta Dhar, Dept of History, University of Toronto
115 Jennifer Glassco, PhD Candidate in Anthropology, McGill University, Montreal
116 Sergio Arcaro Centennial College Toronto Ontario Canada
117 Nishant Upadhyay, York University, Mississaugas of New Credit Territories (Toronto)
118 Joel Dickau, University of Toronto, Canada
119 Ponni Arasu, Graduate Student, Department of History, University of Toronto.
120 Piyusha Chatterjee, Concordia University, Montreal
121 Apurva Ashok, BA Student, McGill University.
122 Rebecca Coulter, PhD, Professor Emerita, University of Western Ontario, London, ON, Canada
123 Maya Khankhoje, former student at Concordia University/McGill University, Montreal.
124 Kiran Mirchandani, University of Toronto, Canada
125 Dr. Dylan Clark, Lecturer, The Asian Institute, University of Toronto (Canada)
126 Joseph H. Carens, Professor of Political Science, University of Toronto
\127 Mohamad Tavakoli, University of Toronto
128 Michael Nijhawan, York University, Toronto
129 Holly Gilmour, Oshawa, Ontario
130 Jordy Cummings, York University, Toronto
131 Zaheer Baber, Professor, Department of Sociology, University of Toronto
132 Ayyaz Mallick, PhD student, York University Canada
133 Mostafa Abedinifard, MacEwan University, Edmonton
134 Michael Truscello, Associate Professor, Mount Royal University
135 Jennifer Nedelsky, Faculty of Law and Political Science, University of Toronto, Canada
136 Rupaleem Bhuyan, Associate Professor, Faculty of Social Work, University of Toronto
137 Akshaya Tankha, Doctoral Candidate, University of Toronto
138 Colin J Campbell, OCAD University, Toronto, Canada
139 Justin Podur, Associate Professor, York University, Toronto
140 Kanta Murali, Assistant Professor, University of Toronto
141 Poulami Roychowdhury, McGill University, Montreal
142 Pierre-Alexandre Paquet, PhD Student and Lecturer, McGill University
143 Sailaja Krishnamurti, York University, Toronto
144 Nick Tosaj, University of Toronto
145 Nick McGee, University of Toronto, Toronto ON
146 Anil Varughese, Assistant Professor, Carleton University, Ottawa
147 Chandrima Chakraborty, Associate Professor, McMaster University, Hamilton
148 Katherine Lemons, McGill University, Montreal
149 Noa Shaindlinger, PhD Candidate, University of Toronto
150 Jessica Stilwell, McGill University, Montreal
151 Reena Shadaan, PhD Candidate, York University
152 Mary Louise Adams, Queen’s University, Canada
153 Sadeqa Siddiqui, Montreal Canada
154 Dhruv Jain, York University, Toronto, Canada
155 Ashutosh Kumar
156 Emma Alexander, University of Winnipeg, Winnipeg
157 Andrew Ivaska, Associate Professor of History, Concordia University, Montreal
158 Chiara Letizia, UQAM, Montreal, Canada
159 Holly Gilmour, Oshawa, Ontario
160 Elise Chenier, Professor, Simon Fraser University
161 Edward Dunsworth, University of Toronto, Canada
162 Chandan Narayan, York University
163 Kajri Jain, University of Toronto, Toronto
164 Sandeep Banerjee, McGill University
165 Charles Stankievec, University of Toronto, Canada
166 Naomi Nagy, University of Toronto
167 R.Cheran, University of Windsor, Canada
168 LM Ishiguro, University of British Columbia, Vancouver
169 Katie Davis, University of Toronto, Toronto, ON
170 Daniel Bender, Historical and Cultural Studies, University of Toronto-Scarborough
171 Radhika Mongia, York University, Toronto
172 Kristin Bright, Carleton University, Ottawa Canada
173 Kevin A. Gould, Concordia University, Department of Geography, Planning and Environment
174 Jamie Magnusson, U of Toronto, Canada
175 Mona Luxion, PhD Candidate, McGill University (Montreal); visiting scholar at CEPT University and IIM Bangalore
176 Ken MacDonald, Dept. of Geography, University of Toronto, Toronto, ON
177 Diane Shea, Dawson College, Montreal
178 David Morris, Concordia University, Montreal
179 Miriam Diamond, Professor, Department of Earth Sciences, University of Toronto
180 Michael Ekers, Assistant Professor, University of Toronto
181 Luin Goldring, York University, Toronto, Canada
182 Katherine Bischoping, Department of Sociology, York University, Toronto
183 Punam Khosla, York University
184 Nancy Jackson, Vancouver BC. Associate Professor Emerita, University of Toronto
185 Penni Stewart, York University, Toronto
186 Nancy Mandell, Professor, Sociology, York University, Toronto, Ontario, Canada
187 Hyun Ok Park, Associate Professor of Sociology, York University, Toronto
188 Margaret E. Beare, York University, Toronto
189 Shubhra Gururani, Associate Professor, York University
190 Sophie Voegele, York University Toronto, Canada and Zurich University of the Arts ZHdK, Switzerland
191 Mark Thomas, Department of Sociology, York University, Toronto, Canada
192 Amber Gazso, York University, Canada
193 Elizabeth Lunstrum, Associate Professor, York University, Toronto, Canada
194 Kathryn Barber, York University
195 Azar Masoumi, York University, Canada
196 Melanie Balfour, PhD student, History department, University of Toronto
197 Gokboru S. Tanyildiz, PhD Student, Sociology, York University, Canada
198 Michael Ornstein, Sociology, York University
199 Diana Abraham, York University
200 David McNally, Professor of Political Science, York University, Toronto, Canada
201 Matt Jones, University of Toronto
202 Benjamin Christensen, PhD Candidate, York University
203 Pauline O’Connor, Ryerson University, Toronto, Canada
204 Walter Whiteley, York University, Toronto, Ontario, Canada
205 Nalini Persram, York University, Canada
206 Pallavi V Das, Lakehead University, Thunder Bay
207 Honor Ford-Smith, Associate Professor, Faculty of Environmental Studies, York University, Toronto, Canada
208 Tina Virmani, Humber College, Toronto
209 Erin Runions, a Canadian in the U.S. (Associate Professor of Religious Studies, Pomona College, California)
210 Danijel Matijevic, University of Toronto, Toronto, Ontario
211 Peter Vandergeest, York University, Toronto
212 Perry Maddox, McGill University
213 Daniel Yon, Associate Professor, Dept. of Anthropology and Faculty of Education, York University, Toronto.
214 Miguel Gonzalez, York University
215 Zoe Newman, Toronto, Canada
216 Karen Anderson, Associate Professor, York University Canada
217 Malcolm Blincow, Anthropology, York University (Retired)
218 Mark Goodman, Department of Sociology, York University
219 Eric Clark, professor, Lund University, Sweden
220 Gizem Cakmak, York University (Toronto, Canada)
221 Dr. Alex Latta, Wilfrid Laurier University, Waterloo, ON
222 Max Haiven, Assistant Professor, Nova Scotia College of Art and Design
223 Girish Daswani, University of Toronto, Canada
224 Sima Aprahamian, Ph.D. Simone de Beauvoir Institute
225 Alexandra L., University of Toronto
226 Lorna Erwin, Associate Professor, York University
227 Prof.Emeritus, Meyer Brownstone, University of Toronto, Toronto Ontario Canada
228 Colleen Bell, Assistant Professor, University of Saskatchewan
229 Gulay Kilicaslan, York University, Toronto, Phd Student at Sociology
230 Bonita Lawrence, Department of Equity Studies, York University
231 Duygu Gul Kaya, York University, Toronto
232 Soma Chatterjee, School of Social Work, York University, Toronto
233 Rana Sukarieh, Phd candidate, Sociology department, York University
234 Paul Kingston, Associate Professor Political Science, university of Toronto
235 Matthew Rowlinson, English and Centre for Theory and Criticism, Western University
236 Harry Smaller (Ph.D), Faculty of Education, York University, Toronto
237 Pablo Idahosa, York Univetsity
238 Lily Cho, York University, Toronto
239 Tariq Amin-Khan, Ryerson University, Toronto
240 Himani Bannerji
241 Anwesha Ghosh, University of Toronto, Toronto
242 David L. Robinson, University of Toronto
243 Natalie Kouri-Towe, University of Toronto, Toronto, ON
244 Carlota McAllister, York University, Toronto, Canada
245 Sara Carpenter, University of Alberta, Edmonton, AB, Canada
246 Liette Gilbert, York University, Toronto
247 Amir Hassanpour, Associate Prof (Ret.), University of Toronto, Toronto, Canada
248 Lorna Weir, York University, Toronto, Canada
249 Stephen Slemon, Professor of English & Film Studies, University of Alberta
250 Stephen Rockel, University of Toronto, Toronto, Ontario, Canada
251 Anna Zalik, York University, Canada
252 Joan Simalchik, University of Toronto Mississauga
253 Emily Zimmermann, York University MA student, North York, On
254 Monica Espaillat Lizardo, University of Toronto
255 Hyun Ok Park, Associate Professor of Sociology, York University, Toronto
256 Barbara Evans, Department of Cinema and Media Studies, York University, Toronto
257 Karen Murray, York University
258 Marcia Macaulay, York University, Toronto, Canada
259 Eric Mykhalovskiy, Associate Professor, York University
260 Ranu Basu York University
261 Dr. Barbara Heron, Professor, School of Social Work, York University, Toronto, ON, Canada
262 Prof. Sam Lanfranco, York University, Canada
263 Deborah Brock, York University, Toronto
264 Prof. Ian Radforth, Department of History, University of Toronto, Toronto, Canada
265 Teresa Abbruzzese, York University, Toronto, Canada
266 Louis Lefeber, Professor of Economics, York university, Toronto, Canada
267 Leigh Denholm, York University, Canada.
268 Prof. Aryn Martin, York University, Toronto ON Canada
269 M Shohet, UTSC, Toronto, Canada
270 Viviana Patroni, York University, Canada
271 Hira Singh, York University
272 Shahrzad Mojab, University of Toronto
273 Professor Gail Vanstone, York University, Toronto, Canada
274 Srilata Raman, Religion, University of Toronto
275 Anne O’Connell, Associate Professor, York University
276 Caroline Hossein, York University
277 Robert Latham, Political Science, York University, Toronto, Canada
278 Roshney Kurian, McMaster University, Hamilton ON, Canada
279 Craig Jennex, Department of English & Cultural Studies, McMaster University, Canada
280 Ravi Adve, University of Toronto
281 Sarah Harrison, McMaster University, Hamilton ON Canada
282 Olivia Polk, McMaster University, Hamilton, Ontario, Canada
283 Shalini Sharma, Dept. of Economics, University of Toronto at Mississauga
284 Eva C Karpinski, Associate Professor, York University, Toronto
285 Tyler Pollard, McMaster University, Hamilton, ON
286 Nour Afara, McMaster University, Hamilton
287 Alison Crosby
288 Glenn Stalker, Associate Professor, York University, Toronto
289 BD Ferguson, McMaster University, Ontario
290 Danielle Landry, PhD student, York University
291 Susie O’Brien, McMaster University, Hamilton ON canada
292 Franca Iacovetta, Professor, University of Toronto
293 Eliot Tretter, Proffesor, University of Calgary
294 Markus Reisenleitner, YorkU
295 Kasim Husain, PhD Candidate and Sessional Lecturer, McMaster University
296 Mary O’Connor, McMaster University, Hamilton, Ontario, Canada
297 Sarah D’Adamo, McMaster University, Hamilton, ON
298 Elizabeth Zanoni, Postdoctoral Fellow, University of Toronto Scarborourgh
299 Adan Jerreat-Poole, McMaster University, Hamilton, ON, CANADA
300 Dr. Anne Savage, McMaster University
301 Dr. Lorraine York, McMaster University, Hamilton ON
302 James King, F.R.S.C.
303 Marcelo Vieta, Assistant Professor, University of Toronto
304 Jeff Fedoruk, McMaster University, Hamilton Ontario
305 Benjamin Prus, McMaster University, Hamilton, Ontario, Canada
306 Constantine Gidaris, McMaster University, Hamilton, ON
307 Michelle Buckley, University of Toronto
308 Donald Goellnicht, McMaster University, Hamilton, Canada
309 Caitlin Janzen, Ph.D Student, York University
310 Lesley Wood, York University, Toronto Canada
311 Christine Dalton, Hamilton
312 Andrew Clement, Professor Emeritus, University of Toronto
313 Marcelle Kosman, University of Alberta, Edmonton Alberta
314 Marcello Musto, York University
315 Dr. Sourayan Mookerjea, Department of Sociology, University of Alberta, Edmonton, Canada
316 Amber Dean, McMaster University
317 Donna Gabaccia, University of Toronto
318 Jeffrey Pilcher, University of Toronto
319. Michelle Cho, McGill University, Montreal
- Malavika Kasturi, University of Toronto, Toronto
321. Janet Rubinoff, York University, Toronto
322 Molly Ladd-Taylor, York University
323 Neil ten Kortenaar, University of Toronto Scarborough
324 Natasha Pinterics, University of Alberta, Edmonton
325 Craig Fortier, Assistant Professor Social Development Studies, Renison University College (University of Waterloo)
326 Malissa Phung, McMaster University, Canada
327 Carmela Murdocca, York University
328 Shamika Shabnam, Doctoral Candidate at McMaster University, Hamilton, Ontario, Canada
329 Kovid Sharma
330 Brycen Dwayne Janzen, McMaster University – Hamilton, ON
331 Janet Rubinoff, York University (Toronto)
332 Sonia Persaud, McMaster University Hamilton
333 Hilton Bertalan, York University
334 Aditi Gupta, University of Alberta, Edmonton
11. Open letters from CeMIS professors and students expressing solidarity with JNU students and staff
Dear Vice Chancellor,
We are writing to express our deep concern and shock at the events unfolding on your campus, and we urge the responsible authorities to act decisively to protect the reputation of JNU as a global centre of academic excellence where students engage in free and vigorous debate.
Since its inception, the Centre for Modern Indian Studies (CeMIS) at the University of Göttingen, Germany, has had the privilege of being closely associated with the academic community of JNU. A formal MOU between our institutions has enabled the intensive exchange of students and faculty between our institutions for over five years. Each year, we have several JNU students and professors in residence as guest scholars, and CeMIS students and faculty are welcomed as visiting scholars at JNU. We undertake collaborative research projects with several individual faculty members across your campus, and have formally partnered with JNU faculty on several large international research grant applications. JNU is thus a vital link in an international network of world class collaborative research in the social sciences and humanities. It is the only Indian institution with which we have maintained such close cooperation because we recognize its reliable excellence.
Now, however, the academic freedom that has formed the very basis of our cooperation with JNU, and that has enabled its scholars to be recognized across the globe for their pioneering intellectual work, is under serious threat. The campus is in a state of siege and police power is being abused to quell dissent. We admire the courage and integrity of JNU's teachers and students who have withstood this unwarranted assault with peaceful protest. We ask that you, as the seniormost administrator, restore the institutional autonomy of JNU and provide immediate assurance to the international community that JNU will maintain its commitment to a vision of India that champions academic freedoms and civil liberties.
Sincerely,
Prof. Dr. Ravi Ahuja
Prof. Dr. Patrick Eisenlohr
Prof. Dr. Srirupa Roy
Prof. Dr. Rupa Viswanath
Professors, Centre for Modern Indian Studies (CeMIS), University of Göttingen
CeMIS students express solidarity with JNU students and staff
We, students of the Centre for Modern Indian Studies in Göttingen, express our solidarity with Jawaharlal Nehru University students and staff in Delhi.
We align ourselves with CeMIS professors, who last week published an open letter to the JNU Vice Chancellor, urging him to restore the university’s institutional autonomy and protect academic freedoms and civil liberties.
We are deeply concerned by the recent events at JNU. The university should be a place of critical debate and thought, as well as a platform for political activism. Unfortunately, the incidents of the last two weeks have demonstrated that these essential aspects of university life are no longer secure.
Under the pretext of democracy and national security, the government is violently proceeding against students, professors and the staff of JNU. The imprisonment of Kanhaiya Kumar, physical and mental violence against those labelled ‘anti-national’ by the government and fractions of the media, as well as the ongoing police presence on the campus are clearly anti-democratic actions.
JNU is an important institutional partner for CeMIS, with academic exchange between the institutes since CeMIS was opened in 2009. Several JNU professors and students have worked and studied at CeMIS, and our students have welcomed the opportunity to do exchanges at JNU. For us students, studying at JNU meant fruitful discussions, being part of a vibrant student community, and having the chance to participate in political debate. A place of acceptance and security, JNU also provided a warm and welcoming atmosphere for all of us. We greatly enjoyed the academic, cultural and social exchange on the JNU campus. We not only had the chance to widen our academic horizons, but also to make close friends.
The repressive actions of the government against those who question and actively challenge social and structural inequalities in India have already claimed several victims, one of them being Rohith Vemula. Many JNU students fight against casteism, sexism, gender inequality and other forms of discrimination. And it is this activism which makes JNU a place we highly appreciate and greatly respect.
We therefore demand the restoration of academic freedom, the immediate release of Kanhaiya Kumar, an end to physical and mental violence against so-called ‘anti-nationals’, and the withdrawal of the police force from the campus.
We stand in solidarity with our friends, colleagues and the staff at JNU.
CeMIS students
12. Statement of solidarity with student activists in India, from Pennsylvania
We, activists and academics in the Pennsylvania region, strongly condemn the attack on academic freedom at Jawaharlal Nehru University (JNU), New Delhi. The arrest of Kanhaiya Kumar, the President of the JNU Students Union, on charges of sedition has brought to light the intervention of the Union Government in the internal matters of the university. The repeated interference by police personnel at the behest of Vice Chancellors on university campuses is a draconian move. The charges against students were brought after an event organised by a section of students on campus premises to discuss the judicial execution of Afzal Guru. The JNU Students’ Union was subsequently held responsible for the “anti-national” slogans that were chanted by a group of students. We condemn these trumped-up and unconstitutional charges and stand in solidarity with the efforts to repeal capital punishment in India.
The events unfolding at JNU reveal disturbing similarities with instances of government repression on other campuses. We remember, with distress, the actions of the University of Hyderabad (UoH) administration in cahoots with the Central Government, actions that led to the death of a promising Ambedkarite student-activist, Rohith Vemula. The protests that arose indicted the discriminatory atmosphere prevailing in our universities as tantamount to the denial of the fundamental right to education to socially marginalised groups. Further, the murder of social thinkers like Govind Pansare and M.M. Kalburgi by hyper-nationalist elements under the tacit encouragement of the policies of the Central Government has shocked all advocates of free speech in India.
The charges of sedition against students participating in democratic discussion of public events is highly objectionable. The stifling of voices through intimidation and muscle power does not bode well for educational institutions.
Debate and dissent are integral parts of a strong democracy. Universities are critical public spaces that support these democratic practices to realize the values of social justice enshrined in the ideals of the constitution. International campuses like JNU, FTII and UoH bring together diverse group of students in the spirit of self-reflexive and deep intellectual engagement to ask fundamental questions of their social realities. An attack on these institutions is an attack on this precious pedagogical space. Student movements in India in alliance with other social movements in the country have historically been a resilient and sensitive force. The BJP government’s efforts to undermine them is nothing but an assault on Indian democracy. The government has failed to protect the rights of student bodies, and the highhandedness of the police highlights the insecurities of the present government.
In the United States during a presidential election year, we watch increasingly bigoted views against blacks, Muslims, and immigrants gaining ground. These events cannot be seen in isolation and we stand at the intersection of socio-political movements in the US and South Asia.
We stand in solidarity with students and faculty of JNU and demand the immediate release of the detained students. We appeal to all advocates for academic freedom in India and abroad to stand united against this state atrocity.
- Anannya Bohidar, Graduate Student, South Asia Studies, University of Pennsylvania
- Ammel Sharon, Graduate Student, South Asia Studies, University of Pennsylvania
- Meghna Chandra, Philadelphia South Asian Collective
- Ania Loomba, English, University of Pennsylvania
- Projit Mukharji, History and Sociology of Science, University of Pennsylvania
- Najnin Islam, Graduate Student, English, University of Pennsylvania
- Suvir Kaul, English, University of Pennsylvania
- Rallapalli Sundaram, South Asia Studies, University of Pennsylvania
- Teren Sevea, South Asia Studies, University of Pennsylvania
- Debjani Bhattacharyya, History, Drexel University
- Kasturi Sen, Lawyer for Defender Association of Philadelphia and Philadelphia South Asian Collective
- Toorjo Ghose, Social Policy and Practice, University of Pennsylvania
- Ishani Dasgupta, Graduate Student, South Asia Studies, University of Pennsylvania
- Shampa Chatterjee, Medical School, University of Pennsylvania
- Lucas de Lima, Graduate Student, Comparative Literature, University of Pennsylvania
- Sangeeta Banerji, Graduate Student, Geography, Rutgers University
- Sarita Mizin, Graduate Student, English, Lehigh University
- Aashish Gupta, Graduate Student, Demography, University of Pennsylvania
- Shourjya Deb, Graduate Student, Public Policy and Administration, Rutgers University
- Sugra Bibi, University of Pennsylvania
- Samira Junaid, Graduate Student, South Asia Studies, University of Pennsylvania
- Nandita Chaturvedi, Graduate Student, Physics and Astronomy, University of Pennsylvania
- Muhammed Malik, with Philadelphia South Asia Collective
- Joshua Pien, South Asia Studies, University of Pennsylvania
- Sirus Joseph Libeiro, Graduate Student, School of Design, University of Pennsylvania
- Sambuddha Chaudhuri, Graduate Student, School of Social Policy and Practice, University of Pennsylvania
- Tanushree Bhan, Graduate Student, Public Policy and Public Affairs, University of Massachusetts Boston
- Pooja Nayak, Graduate Student, South Asia Studies, University of Pennsylvania.
- Kaushik Ramu, Graduate Student, Comparative Literature, University of Pennsylvania.
- Darakhshan Khan, Graduate Student, South Asia Studies, University of Pennsylvania.
- Timothy J. Loftus, Graduate Student, Religion, Temple University.
- Mercedes Yanora, Graduate Student, South Asia Studies, University of Pennsylvania.
- Faisal I Chaudhry, South Asia Studies, University of Pennsylvania.
- Sudev J Sheth, Graduate Student, South Asia Studies, University of Pennsylvania.
- Brooke Stanley, Graduate Student, English, University of Pennsylvania.
- Melissa E. Sanchez, English, University of Pennsylvania.
- Hao Jun Tam, Graduate Student, English, University of Pennsylvania.
- David Kazanjian, English, University of Pennsylvania.
- Aaron Bartels-Swindells, Graduate Student, English, University of Pennsylvania.
- Manjita Mukharji, South Asia Studies, University of Pennsylvania.
- Diksha Dhar, Graduate Student, Fulbright-Nehru Visiting Scholar, University of Pennsylvania.
- Faranak Miraftab, Urban and Regional Planning, University of Illinois, Urbana-Champaign.
- Timothy Lorndale, Graduate Student, South Asia Studies, University of Pennsylvania.
- Brittany Puller, Graduate Student, South Asia Studies, University of Pennsylvania.
- Philip Friedrich, Graduate Student, South Asia Studies, University of Pennsylvania.
- Dave Kussell, Undergraduate, Economic History, University of Pennsylvania.
- Jared Weinstein, Undergraduate, Math, University of Pennsylvania.
- Pushkar Sohoni, South Asia Studies, University of Pennsylvania.
- Akshay Walia, Graduate Student, Anthropology, University of Pennsylvania.
- Lavanya Nott, Philadelphia South Asia Collective.
- Leopold Eisenlohr, Graduate Student, Chinese, University of Pennsylvania.
- Evelyn Soto, Graduate Student, English, University of Pennsylvania.
- Johanna Greeson, Social Policy and Practice, University of Pennsylvania.
- Julia Chatterjee, Undergraduate, South Asia Studies, University in Pennsylvania.
- Josephine Park, English, University of Pennsylvania.
- Priti Narayan, Graduate Student, Geography, Rutgers University.
- Monidipa Mondal, Graduate Student, Rutgers University.
- Baishakh Chakrabarti, Graduate Student, South Asia Studies, University of Pennsylvania.
- Chao Guo, Social Policy and Practice, University of Pennsylvania.
- Ram Cnaan, Social Policy and Practice, University of Pennsylvania.
- Femida Handy, Social Policy and Practice, University of Pennsylvania.
- Ezekiel Dixon-Roman, Social Policy and Practice, University of Pennsylvania.
- Andrea Doyle, Social Policy and Practice, University of Pennsylvania.
- Sheena Sood, Philadelphia South Asia Collective.
- Rovel Sequeira, Graduate Student, English, University of Pennsylvania.
- Daniel Davies, Graduate Student, English, University of Pennsylvania.
- David L. Eng, English, University of Pennsylvania.
- Nancy J. Hirschmann, Political Science, University of Pennsylvania.
- Kalyan Nadiminti, Graduate Student, English, University of Pennsylvania.
- James English, Director, Penn Humanities Forum, University of Pennsylvania.
- Micah Del Rosario, Graduate Student, English, University of Pennsylvania.
- Chi-Ming Yang, English, University of Pennsylvania.
- Jean-Christophe Cloutier, English, University of Pennsylvania.
- Andrew Lamas, Urban Studies, University of Pennsylvania.
- Amy Kaplan, English, University of Pennsylvania.
- Jed Esty, English, University of Pennsylvania.
- Prachi Priyam, Philadelphia South Asia Collective.
- Michael Gamer, English, University of Pennsylvania.
- Timothy Corrigan, English, University of Pennsylvania.
- Paul Saint-Amour, English, University of Pennsylvania.
- Monika Bhagat-Kennedy, Graduate Student, English, University of Pennsylvania.
- Fatima Tassadiq, Anthropology, University of Pennsylvania.
- Rahul Mukherjee, Cinema Studies, University of Pennsylvania.
- Eram Alam, History and Sociology of Science, University of Pennsylvania.
- Jazmin Delgado, Graduate Student, English, University of Pennsylvania.
- Luther Obrock, South Asia Studies, University of Pennsylvania.
- Raili Roy, South Asia Studies, University of Pennsylvania.
- Hariprasad Kowtha, Philadelphia South Asian Collective.
13. Bangalore research network’s letter of solidarity with JNU
We, the undersigned members of the Bangalore Research Network and a consortium of academics and researchers from Bangalore, declare our solidarity with the students and faculty of the Jawaharlal Nehru University, New Delhi protesting the illegal police arrest of JNUSU president Kanhaiya Kumar on charges of sedition. We unequivocally stand by them in affirming that universities are autonomous spaces for the free expression of a plurality of beliefs and cannot become military spaces of thought control that go against the very grain of a democratic society. With them, we condemn the blatantly authoritarian attempt by the police and the central government to witch hunt students on the basis of their political beliefs. We also condemn the unethical media trial of JNU students such as Kanhaiya Kumar and Umar Khalid.
In a speech that is now widely available on the internet, Kanhaiya Kumar spoke critically of the BJP government policies at a peaceful student meeting held at JNU which was well within his rights by the laws of the land. This occurred a day after a group of unidentified students shouted slogans at an event that he had no part in organising. Legal luminaries have opined that those slogans about the rights of Kashmiris to independence from Indian military oppression over the last few decades, whether one might agree with them or not, do not amount to sedition. Kanhaiya Kumar was, however, arrested by the police for ‘anti-national’ behaviour and for violating sedition laws against incitement of violence. With no proof to substantiate the charge of sedition, his arrest can only be read as a reflection of the authoritarian nature of the current Indian government and its intolerance to any dissent. JNU is but the latest example of attempts to stifle dissenting student voices in university campuses across India, including others at FTII, BHU and University of Hyderabad. This is reflective of the current climate where higher education is being viewed as purely instrumental, captured by the logics of the neoliberal state and capital.
As researchers, scholars, and academics, we are extremely concerned with the manner in which the ruling government has so blatantly set aside India’s longstanding commitment to plurality in belief. The space and freedom to express diverse and divergent beliefs and opinions are the foundations for critical thought and expression that university spaces cultivate. We urge the Vice Chancellor of JNU, who gave the police permission to wrongfully detain and arrest JNU students, to recognise the momentum of support building up for them and to immediately step in to safeguard their rights.
Dated: February 22, 2016.
Signatures in alphabetical order:
- Abeer Kapoor, Alumnus, Azim Premji University, Bangalore
- Abhishek Hazra, Srishti Institute of Art, Design and Technology, Bangalore
- Aditi Arur, Consultant, J-PAL South Asia, Bangalore
- Amman Madan, Azim Premji University, Bengaluru
- Andrea Wright, Department of Anthropology, Brown University, Rhode Island
- Anjali Shivanand, Centre for Child and the Law, National Law School of India University, Bangalore
- Aparna Sundar, Visiting Faculty, Azim Premji University, Bangalore
- Andaleeb Rahman, Postdoctoral Fellow, Indian Institute for Human Settlements, Bangalore
- Anwesa Bhattacharya, Indian Institute of Science, Bangalore
- Archit Guha, Centre for Public History, Bangalore
- Asha Verma, Alumnus, Azim Premji University, Bangalore
- Ashwin, Independent Researcher, Azim Premji University, Bangalore
- Atreyee Majumder, Azim Premji University, Bangalore
- Avishek Ray, NIT Silchar
- Bitasta Das, Indian Institute of Science, Bangalore
- Debjani Banerjee, Srishti Institute of Art, Design and Technology, Bangalore
- Devaki, L., Azim Premji University, Bangalore
- Dhruva Desai, Alumnus, Azim Premji University, Bangalore
- Elizabeth Thomas, Centre for the Study of Culture and Society, Bangalore
- Gayatri Menon, Azim Premji University, Bangalore
- Garima Jain, Indian Institute for Human Settlements, Bangalore
- Girija K P, Centre for the Study of Culture and Society, Bangalore
- Gowri Vijayakumar, Department of Sociology, University of California, Berkeley
- Hemangini Gupta, Department of Women’s Gender and Sexuality Studies, Colby College, Maine
- Issac Arul Selva, Human Rights Activist, Bangalore
- Jasmeen Patheja , Blank Noise.
- Jyothsna Belliappa, Bengaluru
- Kanthi Krishnamurthy, Centre for the Study of Culture and Society, Bangalore
- Kavya Murthy, Bangalore
- Kinnari Pandya, Azim Premji University, Benguluru
- K Ravichandran, Student, Azim Premji University , Bangalore
- Lakshmi Arya, Independent scholar and writer, Bangalore
- Lata Mani, Independent Researcher, Bengaluru
- Lindsay Vogt, Department of Anthropology, University of California, Santa Barbara
- Madhu Bhushan, Independent (re)searcher-activist, Bangalore
- Manisha Anantharaman, Justice Community and Leadership, Saint Mary’s College of California
- Maia Barkaia,(JNU, 2010), Tbilisi State University (Tbilisi) and University of Oxford, Oxford.
- Manu V. Mathai, Azim Premji University, Bangalore
- Muthatha Ramanathan, Bangalore
- Navdeep Mathur, IIM Ahmedabad
- Narendra Raghunath, Srishti Institute of Art, Design and Technology, Bangalore
- Neenu Suresh, National Law School of India University, Bangalore
- Nikunja S. Bhuyan, Student, Azim Premji University, Bangalore.
- Nimisha Agarwal, National Institute of Advanced Studies, Bangalore
- Nitya V, Bengaluru
- Padma Baliga, St. Joseph’s College, Bengaluru
- Padmini Ray Murray, Srishti Institute of Art, Design and Technology, Bangalore
- Pallavi Gaur, Student, Azim Premji University, Bangalore
- Pooja Sagar, Srishti Institute of Art, Design and Technology, Bangalore
- P. P. Sneha, Bangalore
- Prakriti Prajapati, Researcher, ATREE, Bengaluru
- Pranesh Prakash, Bangalore
- Preeti Kharb, Indian Institute of Astrophysics, Bangalore
- Rajeev Kumaramkandath, Christ University, Bengaluru
- Rameshwara Nand Jha, Alumnus, Azim Premji University, Bangalore
- Rashmi Sawhney, Srishti Institute of Art, Design and Technology, Bangalore
- Renny Thomas (JNU 2015), Department of Sociology, Jesus and Mary College, University of Delhi
- Riddhi Pandey, Student, Azim Premji University, Bangalore
- Robert M Geraci, Manhattan College (former Visiting Scholar at IISc), New York
- Rolla Das, National Institute of Advanced Studies, Bangalore
- Sanam Roohi, NIAS, Bangalore and AISSR, University of Amsterdam
- Sarah Jacobson, Azim Premji University, Bangalore
- Savitha Suresh Babu, National Institute of Advanced Studies, Bangalore
- Sahil Sasidharan, Associate - Academics & Research, IIHS, Bangalore/Bengaluru
- Sazana Jayadeva, The German Institute of Global and Area Studies, Hamburg
- Scott Sorrell, Department of Anthropology, Cornell University, New York
- Sharad Sure, Azim Premji University, Bangalore
- Sharmadip Basu, Azim Premji University, Bangalore
- Shoibal Chakravarty, National Institute of Advanced Studies, Bangalore
- Shreyas Sreenath, Department of Anthropology, Emory University, Atlanta
- Shreyas Srivatsa, Urban Planner & Architect, Bangalore
- Shrishtee Bajpai, Alumnus, Azim Premji University, Bangalore
- Shruti Ajit, Researcher, Kalpavriksh, Pune
- Simy Joy, Independent Researcher, Ely, England
- Smriti Srinivas, NAGARA, Bangalore
- Soundarya Iyer, Student, NIAS, Bangalore
- Sreechand Tavva, Post Graduate Student, Azim Premji University, Bangalore
- Sreeparna Chattopadhyay, Azim Premji University, Bangalore
- Subadra Panchanadeswaran, Adelphi University, New York
- Subir Rana, National Institute of Advanced Studies, Bangalore
- Sufaid V, Azim Premji University, Bangalore
- Sunandan, Azim Premji University, Bangalore
- Sunayana Ganguly, Independent researcher and entrepreneur, Bangalore
- Suraj Jacob, Azim Premji University, Bangalore
- Tarang Singh, Azim Premji University, Bangalore
- Tathagata Biswas. Azim Premji University, Bangalore
- Vasanthi Mariadass, Srishti Institute for Art Design and Technology, Bangalore
- V R Vachana, Alumna, Azim Premji University, Bangalore
- Vidhya Raveendranathan, Centre For Modern Indian Studies, Georg- August- University, Gottingen, Germany
- Vikas Maniar, Azim Premji University, Bangalore
- Vinay K Sreenivasa, Alternative Law Forum, Bangalore
- Vineeta, Alumnus, Azim Premji University, Bangalore
- Vineeth Krishna E, Centre for Law and Policy Research, Bangalore
- Vivek Mishra, Alumnus, Azim Premji University, Bangalore
- Vrashali Khandelwal, Student, Azim Premji University, Bangalore
14. In solidarity with the dissenting student community in India: A statement from Australia
As academics, students, writers, artists and activists from Australia, we condemn the use of oppressive power by the Indian state, its police, and Hindu fundamentalist groups to shut down voices of dissent emerging from within public universities in India.
We join the international community in extending our support to the students, faculty and staff at Jawaharlal Nehru University (JNU), Hyderabad Central University (HCU) and many other public universities, who have been courageously protesting the overreach of state power and brutal stifling of dissent, carried out in the guise of majoritarian Hindu nationalism (Hindutva).
Students at JNU and HCU have been targeted for opposing the death penalty awarded to Afzal Guru and Yakub Memon, convicted for “terrorism” by the Supreme Court of India. Students’ opposition to the death penalty – an act of violence carried out by the state to assert its sovereign might – has been manipulated by the state, university administrators, and irresponsible media reports, to be understood as their support for “terrorists”, and thus considered treasonous. The labelling of student activists as “anti-national” by invoking the draconian law on sedition (a legacy of British colonial rule), is a blatant attack on academic freedom. These attacks have been orchestrated by the BJP regime to strike fear among citizens who question its practices of anti-minority religious hate mongering and xenophobic propaganda. HCU student Rohith Vemula was suspended and driven to suicide because of the way the university administration and the state intimidated and threatened him. These attacks on students and free speech are not aberrations or sudden spurts of violence. Rather, they are part of a pattern of attacks on every idea and expression that does not pander to fascist Hindutva ideology.
We deplore the attack on journalists, students, academics and activists by the lawyers at the Patiala House Court premises. The silence and inaction of the police in controlling this situation only testify to the state’s complicity in these events. We are appalled by the jingoistic and prejudiced reporting by some media channels to vilify JNU student activists Kanhaiya Kumar and Umar Khalid.
We endorse the demands made by the protesting students, staff and faculty at JNU and HCU. We demand: a) the immediate release of the Kanhaiya Kumar, President of the JNU Student Union, and Umar Khalid and Anirban Bhattacharya; b) that the Bar Council of India enquiry into the attacks on journalists and protestors in Patiala House Court be carried out without political manipulation; c) that there should be no further intimidation and arrests of student activists for carrying out peaceful protests; d) the government must preserve the autonomy of universities and de-militarise campuses.
We acknowledge that our solidarity is being extended from territory occupied by a settler colonial state. We also acknowledge that the Indigenous peoples who have not ceded their sovereignty, own this land. This acknowledgement is a necessary precondition for building transnational solidarity against governments – like those in India and Australia – that use democracy and national security as alibis for legitimising their everyday violence.
Endorsed by:
- Debolina Dutta, PhD Researcher and Lawyer, Melbourne Law School, University of Melbourne
- Oishik Sircar, Teaching Fellow and Doctoral Researcher, Institute for International Law and the Humanities, Melbourne Law School
- Samia Khatun, Postdoctoral Research Fellow, Department of History, University of Melbourne
- Shakira Hussein, Hon. Research Fellow, The University of Melbourne
- Mridula Nath Chakraborty, Academic, Monash University
- Irfan Ahmad, Associate Professor of Political Anthropology, ACU, Melbourne, Australia
- Rajgopal Saikumar, PhD Candidate, The Australian National University
- James Goodman, Associate Professor, University of Technology Sydney
- Kama Maclean, Associate Professor, UNSW
- Monique Hameed, Tutor, University of Melbourne
- Jordy Silverstein, Postdoctoral Research Associate, University of Melbourne
- Heather Goodall, Professor Emerita in History, University of Technology Sydney
- Sukhmani Khorana, Lecturer, University of Wollongong
- Dr Zeena Elton, Independent Researcher/Writer
- Trish May, PhD student, UNSW
- Maryam Alavi Nia, PhD Candidate, UNSW
- Assa Doron, Academic , Australian National University
- Meera Ashar, Lecturer (Assistant Professor), The Australian National University
- Samanthi Gunawardana, Lecturer, Monash University
- Josh Cullinan, Secretary, Australia Bangladesh Solidarity Network
- Dr Lionel Bopage, Retired Public Servant, n/a
- Neeti Aryal Khanal, PhD candidate, Monash University
- Erin Watson-Lynn, Lecturer, Monash University
- Roanna Gonsalves, Writer and academic, UNSW
- Michelle de Kretser, Writer, University of Sydney
- Dr Ruth De Souza, Stream Leader, Research, Policy and Evaluation, , Centre for Culture, Ethnicity and Health
- Hannah Courtney, PhD Candidate, UNSW
- Dr Danny Butt, Lecturer, Centre for Cultural Partnerships, Victorian College of the Arts, University of Melbourne
- John Zubrzycki, PhD Candidate, University of New South Wales
- Ben Spies-Butcher, Senior Lecturer, Macquarie University, Australia
- Camilla Palmer, Postgraduate Researcher, University of New South Wales
- Brenda Dobia, Senior Lecturer, Western Sydney University
- Coel Kirkby, Postdoctoral Fellow, Melbourne Law School
- Elizabeth King, Student, UNSW
- Rajpaul Sandhu, Teaching, ACS
- David Feith, Subject Coordinator, Humanities, Monash College
- Wimal Jayakody, Member of PHRE
- Steve Pereira , Community Engagement, Melbourne University
- Anura, Real Estate Sales, PHRE
- Sithy Marikar, Vice President - AGGSl, Australian Labor Party
- S. R. Sivasubramaniam, Engineer
- Padraic Gibson, Senior Researcher, Jumbunna Indigenous House of Learning, University of Technology Sydney
- Vandana Ram, Artist
- Victoria Baldwin, Administrator
- Robin Jeffrey, Retired Academic
- Nadia Rhook, Lecturer, Latrobe University
- Mohamed Masood, President, Werribee Islamic Centre
- Anthony P. D'Costa, Chair and Professor of Contemporary Indian Studies, University of Melbourne
- Yamini Narayanan, ARC DECRA Senior Research Fellow, Deakin University
- Monimalika Sengupta, PhD Candidate, Monash University
- Parichay Patra, Doctoral Candidate, Monash University, Australia
- Lucy Honan, Teacher, Australian Education Union Councillor
- Arka Chattopadhyay, PhD student, University of Western Sydney
- Rev.Dato' Dr.Sumana Siri, Buddhist Cardinal of Europe, Buddhist Realists' Movement, U.K.,Italy & France
- Kalpana Ram, Associate Professor of Anthropology, Macquarie University
- Dr Sagar Sanyal, Adjunct lecturer, University of Melbourne
- Piergiorgio Moro, Secretary, Australia Asia Worker Links
- Beth Sometimes, Researcher, VCA, Melbourne University
- Russell Smith, Lecturer, Australian National University
- Anuparna Mukherjee, Ph.D. Researcher, ANU
- Amy Thomas, PhD Candidate, University of Technology, Sydney
- Shak Sandhu, Restaurant Manager
- Stephen Church, Doctoral Student/Casual Lecturer & Tutor, University of New South Wales
- Angela Smith, Researcher, North Africa Mixed Migration Task Force
- Balraj Sangha, Justice Of The Peace, Australian Labor Party
- Emma Torzillo, Medical Doctor, University of Sydney and Royal Prince Alfred Hospital, Sydney
- Anne Brewster, Associate Professor, UNSW
- Lalitha Chelliah, Nurse, 3 CR Broadcaster; Socialist Alliance member
- Max Kaiser, PhD Candidate, University of Melbourne
- Dr Amanda Gilbertson, McKenzie Postdoctoral Fellow, University of Melbourne
- Faisal Al-Asaad, Graduate Research, University of Melbourne
- Jerome Small, Industrial Organiser, Socialist Alternative
- Milo Adler-Gillies, Student, Paris 8
- Priya Chacko, Lecturer, University of Adelaide
- Vivien Seyler, Administrative Officer, South Asian Studies Association of Australia
- Bina Fernandez, Senior Lecturer, University of Melbourne
- Ghassan Hage, Professor, University of Melbourne
- Maria Elander, Lecturer in Criminology, School of Social and Political Sciences, University of Melbourne
- Edward Mussawir, Lecturer, Griffith University
- Julia Lomas, PhD Candidate, Art History And Theory, Monash University
- Chris Andrews, Associate Professor, Western Sydney University
- Ben Silverstein, Lecturer, UNSW
- Alexandra Watkins, Academic, Deakin University
- Isabella Ofner, Researcher and Lecturer, The University of Melbourne
- Bina D'Costa, Academic, Department of International Relations, The Australian National University
- Shweta Kishore, Teaching Associate, Monash University
- Léuli Eshraghi, PhD Candidate, Monash University
- Dr. Ridwanul Hoque, Visiting Scholar at La Trobe Law School, La Trobe University
- Kristen Smith, Medical Anthropologist, University of Melbourne
- Joan Nestle, Independent Writer
- Adrian McNeil, Senior Lecturer, Monash University
- Parakrama Niriella, Theatre and Film Director, National Federation of Theatre Artists Sri Lanka
- Cait Storr, Sessional lecturer and PhD candidate, Melbourne Law School
- Greg Bailey, Hon. Research Fellow in Asian Studies (Sanskrit), La Trobe University
- Ian Woolford, Lecturer, La Trobe University
- Michael Stevenson, Retired
- Dolly Kikon, Department of Anthropology and Development Studies, University of Melbourne
- Jasmine Ali, Researcher, RMIT University
- Dr Kuntala Lahiri-Dutt, Senior Fellow, Resource, Environment & Development Program, Crawford School of Public Policy, The Australian National University
- Alison Young, Professor, University of Melbourne
- Usha Natarajan, Law Professor, American University in Cairo
- Ekta Sharma, Poet & Activist
- Rose Parfitt, Research Fellow, Melbourne Law School
- Suzette Mayr, PhD Student, University of New South Wales
- Leigh Hopkinson, Writer
- Amy Parish, PhD Candidate, UNSW
- Samantha Balaton-Chrimes, Lecturer in International Studies, Deakin University
- Audrey Yue, Associate Professor, The University of Melbourne
15. Statement of solidarity with Jawaharlal Nehru University, India – City University of New York
By the Professional Staff Congress, the CUNY faculty and staff union:
PSC-CUNY stands in solidarity with the students, faculty and staff of Jawaharlal Nehru University (JNU) in Delhi, India, in their struggle against state repression of political speech.
We condemn the arrest of JNU student union President, Kanhaiya Kumar, on charges of sedition and the expulsion of eight students by the university administration. The students are being persecuted by the Indian government and the university administration for participating in a rally protesting state policies and actions. It is a gross abuse of power for a democratic state to punish its citizens for exercising their right to political dissent.
JNU is not a stand-alone incident; the recent attacks on students at other universities, like Jadavpur, and University of Hyderabad where it led to the tragic suicide of Dalit activist, Rohith Vemula, are part of a pattern of harassment and repression. We believe that the targeting of politically active youth at public universities reveals the broader program of the Bharatiya Janta Party (BJP) to push its neoliberal attack on the poor, its discriminatory agenda against minorities, its promotion of a hawkish foreign policy, and its squelching of political dissent.
We, at the City University of New York, and our fellow academics at universities throughout the USA appreciate the dangers of stifling academic freedom through our own destructive history. Our union is committed to fighting against class oppression, racism, and sexism, and to vigorously defend the right to political opposition.
We join faculty and students from across the world - including University of Texas, Doctoral Students Council, CUNY, Purdue University, Williams College in the US, Canadian universities, University of Leuven, Belgium, University of Oxford, UK, Bangalore Research Network, Tata Institute of Social Sciences and University of Hyderabad in India - to express our solidarity with the students and faculty at JNU. We call upon Prime Minister Narendra Modi to immediately cease the pattern of persecution at universities. We also call on the Vice Chancellor of JNU to drop all punitive measures against the students engaged in protests, and to demand the immediate release of Kanhaiya Kumar.
This article went live on February twenty-third, two thousand sixteen, at forty minutes past twelve at noon.The Wire is now on WhatsApp. Follow our channel for sharp analysis and opinions on the latest developments.





