Jitender Gupta
What will bite AMU students at the canteen; Prof Siras outside the gates
controversy: AMu
These Walls Have Ears
A profligate V-C, a homophobic row, crime and surveillance—all facets of the AMU syndrome
controversy: AMu
The university’s spooks keep tabs on, even harass students, staff
Outlook

AMU’s Woes

  • AMU’s V-C faces a President’s probe on charges of gross financial misconduct
  • In the guise of depoliticising campus, student elections have been prohibited
  • Campus violence continues, two AMU students murdered in last three years

***

The Aligarh Muslim University (AMU)’s Indo-Saracenic buildings sport fresh red and white paint and its gardens look meticulously manicured. But the surface sheen has in the last few years been torn asunder as one crisis after another billows up in the university. The latest to rock the campus is the controversial suspension of Shrinivas Ramchandra Siras, a reader of Marathi at the university. Siras was found guilty after being caught on film in a homosexual act. Apparently, the fact that same-sex love was decriminalised by the Delhi High Court last year is yet to reach the shores of this 135-year-old institution which, for many reasons, remains stuck in a medieval straitjacket. What adds intrigue to the mix is the question about the identities of the people behind the “sting operation” and their motives.


Prof Siras outside the gates

The 64-year-old reader was fired last month and forced to vacate his campus residence after he was caught in a homosexual embrace with a local rickshaw-puller at his home. Four unidentified people—rumoured to be local journalists—hid in his house and filmed him in the act. They confronted Siras on the spot and later complained to the administration. “The suspension is illegal and I will fight it in the court. What the university should instead do is find out who these people were who intruded on my privacy,” says Siras. While the university’s formal chargesheet against him is still awaited, the campus is already swirling with rumours of an insider hand.

 
 
“The university is not a political institution. Politics should be left outside the campus.”P.K. Abdul Azis, V-C, AMU
 
 
A faculty member at AMU, who did not wish to be named, told Outlook that he spoke to a local TV journalist whose team was present in Siras’s house. “This journalist told me that the university administration, specifically the local intelligence unit, was in the know and that they were present nearby during the exercise,” he says. The AMU pro Rahat Abrar refused to give the names of those involved but the university’s vice-chancellor P.K. Abdul Azis promised stern action if an insider role is established. Many have interpreted the incident as a diversionary tactic to deflect attention from the rot that has set in, more so because Siras has been a “practising homosexual” ever since he joined the university 22 years back (he was set for retirement in September this year). But it’s not just homosexuality that gets AMU’s goat but apparently also heterosexuality. Irfan Khan, secretary of the AMU students’ struggle committee and a research scholar, was suspended in January on grounds of “immorality, intimidation and assault” after he and his girlfriend married against their family’s wish. “The charges are simply not true,” he says.

Azis, vice-chancellor since June ’07, is himself at the centre of some turmoil. He is now the subject of an inquiry set up by the President of India after instances of financial bungling were reported by members of the university’s executive council. She appointed a second panel last month after the first committee’s members resigned last year reportedly due to lack of cooperation in the probe.

The list of charges is long: claiming travelling allowance against university rules, paying his income tax from the varsity fund, bringing in furniture worth several lakhs from Kerala (Azis’s home state) and paying another Rs 12 lakh for its transport, spending close to Rs 2 crore to refurbish the V-C’s residence (including installation of jacuzzis in the bathrooms), buying a Honda Civic despite the availability of two cars, and adopting improper tendering practices, causing losses of millions to the varsity. The principal auditor general of UP has established several of these charges and in a despatch in November ’09 says: “There’s  a complete collapse of financial management and the VC and registrar, instead of stopping this frequent financial irregularity, themselves became part of it.” 

Even the UGC openly stated that it has withheld Rs 8.38 crore because of financial irregularities by the university administration during 2008-09. But Azis welcomes a probe. “The truth will come out and hopefully I’ll be vindicated,” he says.

However, it is not just financial bungling that plagues the university. Crime and academics have always been uncomfortable bedfellows at AMU. There was a murder of a student on campus in ’07 and another outside it in ’09. On both occasions, the university had to be shut down for several weeks. In 2007, right after the murder, the V-C’s residence was attacked and burnt down by agitated students. “The university is not a political institution. Politics should be outside the campus and students should only learn politics in the department of political science,” says Azis.

To clamp down on student’s violence, the present V-C banned student elections, prompting an outcry from many. “For sure, if any student were to act like a hoodlum, every faculty member would back action against him or her...but banning elections is like throwing the baby out with the bathwater,” says Tariq Islam, a reader of philosophy at AMU. “Ever since I joined in 1987, there’s been a gradual decline in the tolerance of dissent,” he adds. Attempts by a few students to bring out an independent newspaper also failed to get any university clearance. “Freedom of expression and democratic representation among students is totally denied here,” says Mohammed Adil Hossain, a mass communications student. But Azis counters, “Why would you need a newspaper in the campus? This is all a hidden agenda to destabilise the varsity”. A grievance redressal cell—the ersatz stand-in for the students union— “met just once last year,” says Adil Siddiqui, an ex-student member of the cell.

Meanwhile, infrastructure, despite attempts at improvement, remains inadequate. “The V-C spends a crore on revamping his house but we don’t get money for basic things like tables and chairs,” says Mukhtar Ahmad, president of the AMU teachers’ association. There are close to 250 vacant teaching posts. “Many fill in on an ad-hoc basis...being paid just Rs 10,000. So you can imagine their standard,” he adds. In another blow, the Medical Council of India last month threatened to derecognise the university’s medical college because of lack of quality infrastructure and faculty.

The real problem, points out Islam, is that AMU over the years has become very “VC-centric”, giving him unwarranted influence. “We teachers are to be blamed because we are the ones who are supposed to run the university. But we tend to run to the V-C for every little problem,” he says. That a recent report ranked AMU among India’s eight best research institutions is a commentary on the competition. For, the university’s founder Sir Syed Ahmed Khan’s dreams of this being an Oxbridge-like institution are far from being achieved.

controversy: AMu
The university’s spooks keep tabs on, even harass students, staff
Outlook
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COLLAPSE COMMENTS :
HAVE YOUR SAY
Feb 27, 2010 02:49 PM
1
“The expulsion of the AMU reader for indulging in Homosexual act is like convicting somebody for homicide for consuming Chicken that was bought from a ‘Government Recognized Shop’.”
Rajneesh Batra
New Delhi, India
Feb 28, 2010 02:44 AM
2
The story of Prof.Shrinivas Ramchandra Siras is sad and his suspension is unjustifiable. Sexual activity in privacy between consenting adults is no one's business. The TV camera crew who invaded the professor's privacy as well as any university staff involved in the plot have commited a criminal offence and must be prosecuted.
Anwaar
Dallas, United States
Feb 28, 2010 03:56 AM
3
>>The story of Prof.Shrinivas Ramchandra Siras is sad and his suspension is unjustifiable.

In principle, yes, Legally speaking, no.

>>The TV camera crew who invaded the professor's privacy as well as any university staff involved in the plot have commited a criminal offence

No. AMU is the only University in India
that contractually agrees to spy on both
students and faculty members. Distasteful,
but it's codified in their rules by now.

>>Sexual activity in privacy between consenting adults is no one's business.

So far, AMU's justifications have been
limited to mindless soundbites about
their 'tehzeeb', etc. I wonder how
this will progress -- will they claim
minority rights to set their policies?

I agree fully that if AMU wants to make
it illegal for open homosexuals to serve
as faculty members or study as students,
they should have that right. It is not
the government's business to interfere.


All that said, Islamic homophobia and
bigotry must be condemned and fought
as strongly and as relentlessly as
possible. Think back to the media
campaign during reading down S. 377 -
and to their lukewarm support now,
Barkha Dutt excepted. There is an
impulse in the Hindu liberal not to
criticize Islam or Muslims -- as if
Muslims are a brand of fragile china.
Murtuza Polen
NYC, United States
Feb 28, 2010 04:51 PM
4
The tragedy of the worst type has hit AMU in the form of Dr Azis. It seems even God cannot save AMU under the present presonalities in power and laws of the country.
Riaz Ahmad
Aligarh, India
Feb 28, 2010 06:44 PM
5
The act is totally against the nature and also against a normal human behaviour.

Though Delhi High Court might has legalised ,yet Indian society is not ready to accept it.However this legalisation has become a tool for some so called advanced people who always clamour for equal rights for everyone without evaluating pros and cons.They are mostly media professionals ,and writers etc.

Is this a new phenomenon in Indian campuses? Answer is a big NO! We have this behaviour prevailing in our society since the primitive age.Because the professor was caught, it has become a news.

At AMU in particular and other campuses in general, we have witnessed so many incidents like that in the past also.Its very common among professors.Even some students residing in hostels are not free from this unnatural behaviour.

Its a serious issue,and very true that no institution of repute can overlook it.Its a respectable decision taken by the professor to not challenge his suspension.This decision also confirms that he has accepted his misconduct.
Shahbaz Alam
Dubai, United Arab Emirates
Feb 28, 2010 11:18 PM
6
If Islam does not permit homosexuality and you are a true believer then dont practice it. But no one has the right to impose their sense of morality on others. India has not become an Islamic state yet, but it will if we give enough time to the Congress party, and hence people should have the right to do, within the confines of their bedroom, what they want.
Joe Brodway
New York, USA
Mar 01, 2010 01:22 AM
7
Shahbaz Alam,

>> The act is totally against the nature and also against a normal human behaviour.

Are you aware of current scientific thinking on the subject resulting from years of painstaking research of innumerable psychologists, sociologists, psychiatrists, psychobiologists, geneticists and anthropologists?
Anwaar
Dallas, United States
Mar 01, 2010 01:46 AM
8
'Shahbaz Alam':

Indeed the Prophet(SAWS) decreed the
death penalty for homosexuality, as
per a Hadith. But you can live in a
theocracy if you so wish. India will
have to continue to liberalize and to
democratize itself as much as possible.

Islamic fanaticism cannot be a roadblock.

>>Is this a new phenomenon in Indian campuses? Answer is a big NO! We have this behaviour prevailing in our society since the primitive age.

Situational homosexuality is different
to a basic sexual orientation. Further,
for your information, Islamic societies
-- among the most sex-segregated in the
world -- have as a consequence very high
rates of situational homosexuality. It
is completely wrong to blame liberalism
for such homosexual phases -- it is in
fact religions like Islam that create
the conditions for situational gayness.

It is estimated that perhaps 2-4% of men
and 1-2% of women are gay. Why bother
with them, even if you do not agree with
homosexuality? Why be obsessed with gays?

India should legalize gay marriage. I
myself have some reservations about kids
being brought up by same-sex parents, but
maybe I am wrong. We should be proud of
our old tolerance and look to the future.
Murtuza Polen
NYC, United States
Mar 01, 2010 02:56 AM
9
Murtuza,

>> I myself have some reservations about kids
being brought up by same-sex parents.

In the current California case, co-advocated by two top lawyers in the country, reams of evidence has been presented to show that children brought up by same-sex parents fare no worse than those brought up by a heterosexual couple, and do much better than those brought up in a family with an alcoholic father who is abusive to his wife or with a depressed mother. This case, once it is resolved in California, will surely go to the Supreme court.
Anwaar
Dallas, United States
Mar 01, 2010 03:05 AM
10
Anwaar:

I agree entirely with you.

My reservations are related
to teasing or harassment in
schools. But I suppose the
other argument is that we
have to start somewhere, and
the prejudices will disappear.

I support gay parenting in the U.S.

As far as India is concerned
I endorse gay marriage, but
am unsure about gay adoption.
Murtuza Polen
NYC, United States
Mar 01, 2010 11:44 AM
11
'Anwaar':

Since you've been a psychiatrist
for so many decades, what is your
take on the issue of gay-parented
kids in schools? About teasing?
Murtuza Polen
NYC, United States
Mar 03, 2010 03:35 AM
12
Apart from the glaring 'breach of privacy' issues, these people with their film-crew broke into his house and hid there without his knowledge or invitation- isn't criminal trespass a cognizable offense in this here secular democracy? How come they have not been arrested and prosecuted?
And apparently, in this so-called 'secular democracy' college professors can be fired on grounds of immorality, intimidation and assault because they married against their family's wishes- must be written somewhere in the schools charter I suppose.
Bodh
Springfield, United States
Mar 03, 2010 07:04 PM
13
Most interesting comment from VC ispolitics should be in the department of ppolitical science. If same logic is aplied to history, theology, medicine etc
mukhtar ahmad
aligarh, India
Mar 05, 2010 07:59 PM
14
the suspension of irfan khan on the grounds that he married his girlfriend without thier parent's permission , not only shows the juvenile behavior of the related authorities but also ridicules the Indian constitution.
hemant
hyderabad, India
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