Hyderabad varsity Dalit prof quits protesting appointment of Pro-Vice-Chancellor

Prof Sreepati Ramudu also alleged that there was hostile the environment for his community in the campus.

Update: 2016-06-10 07:48 GMT
The current environment on the campus is extremely vitiated and is perceived by the Dalit community as intimidating and hostile, alleges Prof Sreepati Ramudu. (Photo: DC)

Hyderabad: A Hyderabad University Dalit professor has resigned protesting against the appointment of Prof Vipin Srivastava as the varsity's Pro-Vice-Chancellor-1 and has alleged that there was "hostile" the environment for his community in the campus.

In his resignation letter to the university Registrar, Prof Sreepati Ramudu, Head of the Centre for the Study of Social Exclusion and Inclusive Policy, on Thursday referred to the death of Dalit research scholar Rohith Vemula on January 17 that stirred nation-wide protests, and said he had been following the developments on the campus before and after the incident.

"The current environment on the campus is extremely vitiated and is perceived by the Dalit community as intimidating and hostile," he said.

"They (Dalits) feel very vulnerable and lack confidence in the impartiality of the administration. So, I had hoped that knowing very well the sentiments of the Dalit faculty expressed in many letters from the SC/ST Teachers Forum, the administration will take up confidence building measures. Instead, to my shock, I see a circular naming Prof Vipin Srivastava as the Pro-Vice-Chancellor-1," Ramudu said.

Reacting to the development, Srivastava on Friday alleged Ramudu was not cooperating in administrative matters and that he was not attending to any work.

"I don't know if he is protesting, but he has not been happy since January. He was not signing any papers, he was not cooperating in administrative matters. He was not attending to any work," he said.

Srivastava said a student wanted to attend a conference but Ramudu was not signing his paper nor was he responding to administrative work. "The Dean and I cleared that paper (of the student)," Srivastava told PTI.

"As far as Ramudu is concerned he has not tendered formal resignation as Head of the Centre, whether he has done so or not I don't know because I am on leave today and it is only through news reports that I came to know about it. I need to check from the university authorities if he has resigned," he said.

Ramudu alleged Srivastava had faced a serious allegation in the past. Srivastava was the chairman of the committee that had recommended punishment for five Dalit research scholars, including Vemula, who committed suicide.

The university had appointed Srivastava as the Pro-Vice-Chancellor-1 on June 7. He would be assisting the Vice-Chancellor Prof Appa Rao Podile.

Ramudu wrote, "I am pained at the constant humiliation and oppression that is meted out to the Dalit community in the university. I am pained and my conscience as the Head of the Centre at a time when the Dalit community on campus lacks the confidence in the administration that should ideally be impartial."

Ramudu said he was the supervisor of one of the suspended students and that he was never informed by the administration about the issue until the suspension order was issued.

"When the students started living in the shopping complex in the 'velivada', in response to the punishment, Prof Appa Rao told us to influence the students in the capacity as supervisors and ask the students to leave the campus. I have been convinced that there have been many omissions and commissions against the Dalit students (violation of procedures) in the investigation of events culminating in the punishment of students which I took to his (Appa Rao) notice," says Ramudu.

He said, he made many constructive suggestions on how to solve this problem which were ignored. As a result of the intransigent attitude of the administration, which he believed resulted in the tragic death of Vemula, he had also expressed these same thoughts openly in the academic council meeting held on April 6, 2016, he said.

He said in his capacity as the Head of the Centre, he thought there will be measures taken by the university administration to build confidence among Dalits on campus but to his dismay, the things were turning the other way round.

"In view of this evidence of a hostile atmosphere on campus against the most vulnerable community, i.e. the Dalits, my conscience does not permit me to continue as Head of a Centre. Therefore, in continuation to the earlier collective decision of SC/ST Teachers' Forum to resign from all administrative posts, I reiterate my decision to resign as Head, CSSEIP in protest," Ramudu said.

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