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Amartya Sen Hits Out At Visva-Bharati Officials, Asks Them To Withdraw ‘False Allegations’

Officials at Visva-Bharati university have accused Nobel laureate Amartya Sen of being in ‘illegal’ possession of land at the campus

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Amartya Sen Hits Out At Visva-Bharati Officials, Asks Them To Withdraw ‘False Allegations’
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Nobel laurate Amartya Sen has written to officials at the Visva-Bharati university accusing them of levelling false allegations against him.

This comes in the backdrop of university authorities accusing the economist of being in “illegal possession” of land at the campus. However, Sen has said that the university land on which his house stands is on a long-term lease.

Last week, the university wrote to the West Bengal government to measure the plot owned by Sen to resolve the dispute. Read here.

Sen wrote to Visva-Bharati officials on Monday demanding that they withdraw their allegations against him and his family and alleged that the accusations are a crude attempt at harassment.

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The noted economist said in his letter that his father had purchased free-hold land from the market and not from Visva-Bharati - to add to their homestead and he has been paying taxes for them.

Sen had also sent a legal notice earlier this year to the VC asking him to withdraw "false" allegations made by him claiming that a plot of land owned by Visva-Bharati is unlawfully occupied by the economist.

While the university was not able to provide any justification for the allegation, it has requested the West Bengal government "to measure the area of our homestead, Pratichi, to compare with the long term lease of land taken by my father in 1940 from Visva-Bharati", Sen said in the letter.

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"This sudden abuse of an 80-year-old document is clearly a crude attempt at harassment or worse," he said.

"Among other errors it ignores the big fact, which I have stated many times (even in the context of this dispute), that a substantial amount of free-hold land was purchased by my father (in the market -- not from Visva-Bharati) to add to our homestead on which khajna and Panchayat taxes are paid by me yearly," the letter said.

Hence the officiating registrar's threat of legal action if the official discovers any additional land beyond the leased land seems hugely mischievous, Sen said.

Stating that he is tired of the VC's repeated claims despite emphatic denials on his part about his phone call to Chakraborty in 2019, Sen said that the VC insisted that the call was made either on June 2 or June 14.

"On being informed that I was abroad for the entire month of June 2019 and came back to India only in July, the story was promptly altered by the V.C.'s office to assert that I had called in June or July but said the same things," the letter said.

"Rather than inventing new falsities and adding to their culpability, Visva-Bharati should withdraw the false allegations made by them, as my lawyer has asked," Sen said.

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A controversy had erupted on December 24 last year, the day Prime Minister Narendra Modi addressed the centenary celebrations of Visva-Bharati, when media reported that the university has written to the West Bengal government alleging dozens of land parcels owned by it were wrongfully recorded in the names of private parties including Sen.

Sen, who now lives in the US, has said that the land, on which his house stands is on a long-term lease, which is nowhere near its expiry.

Stating that the Visva-Bharati authorities had never complained to him or his family about any irregularity in holding the land, Sen has accused the VC of acting at the behest of the Centre "with its growing control over Bengal".

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Visva-Bharati officials were not available for comment on the letter.

West Bengal Chief Minister Mamata Banerjee and several prominent intellectuals of the state have expressed their support to the economist on the row.

(With PTI inputs)

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