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JNU Agitation: Students, Teachers Demand Resignation Of Vice-Chancellor

The teachers and the students of the JNU are demanding a total rollback of the proposed 10 per cent annual hostel fee hike.

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JNU Agitation: Students, Teachers Demand Resignation Of Vice-Chancellor
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A day after the police action against the agitating JNU students left many injured, the Jawaharlal Nehru University Students' Union (JNUSU) and the Jawaharlal Nehru University Teachers' Union (JNUTA) attacked the JNU administration and the Delhi Police, and demanded the resignation of Vice-Chancellor Mamidala Jagadesh Kumar.

The teachers on Tuesday marched from Ganga Dhaba to the administration block of the university, raising slogans against the Vice-Chancellor. They were accompanied by students who, earlier in the day, had organised a press conference and demonstration at the administration block.

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The teachers and the students are demanding a total rollback of the proposed 10 per cent annual hostel fee hike.

The students alleged the Delhi Police were "trying to break the backbone" of the protests by detaining union members. The JNUTA has extended support to students.

On Monday, hundreds of JNU students staged a march to Parliament to protest against the hike in hostel and mess fees. But the police stopped them mid-way. The students then staged a sit-in, which caused traffic snarls across central Delhi.

JNUSU President Aishe Ghosh said, "The police detained around a hundred students, including me and Satish (JNUSU General Secretary), just to prevent the meeting with the MHRD Secretary."

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When the meeting took place late Monday night, we were told the V-C and Registrar would not attend, she added.

"The agitation will end only after all our demands are accepted, and if the V-C has a problem with that then we demand his resignation," Ghosh said.

The students are also demanding the restoration of reservation for SC/ST students in the hostel, rollback of the proposed hostel fee hike, and withdrawal of the proposal to include contractual workers' salary in the mess bill.

The students have conveyed these demands to the Ministry of Human Resource Development. "The protesting students should not face any enquiry," is another of their demands.

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