Why Are India's College Campuses Erupting In Protest?

From fee hikes to shrinking grants and communal biases—students across the country are up in arms against policies that compromise inclusion and investment in research and higher education

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From fee hikes to shrinking grants and communal biases—students across the country are up in arms against policies that compromise inclusion and investment in research and higher education

As Delhi’s Jawaharlal Nehru University protest against the 300 per cent fee hike enters its fifth week, the JNUSU (Jawaharlal University Students Union) has appealed to all students and youth across India to join them to mark the ‘National Protest Day’ defending affordable and accessible education on November 27 and to organize any form of democratic protest at their respective institutions or areas. Last Friday students formed a human chain within the campus, demanding a complete rollback of hostel fees As hundreds of students, academics and members of civil society raised slogans and marched towards the Parliament against the hostel and mess fee hike in JNU last week, not very far away from the venue, at the All India Institute of Medical Sciences (AIIMS) the Resident Doctors Association strongly opposed the proposal to review tuition fees and user charges for various diagnostic procedures. Social media and news channels were abuzz with images and video clips of Delhi Police “brutality”—the image of the visually challenged student Shashi Bhushan being kicked and punched, and reports of young women being pushed and groped are still raw and alive. Delhi’s student protests—especially that in JNU and AIIMs—get a lot more airtime, however the truth is that students across the country are up in arms protesting against policies that would affect the student community adversely and also defending rights, such as the one of a Muslim professor to teach Sanskrit.

Here are some other student protests from around India that you must know about. 

Indian Institute of Technology (IIT), Bombay And IIT-BHU Protest Against 900 per cent Fee Hike:

Earlier in November, M.Tech and PhD students at IIT Bombay staged a protest against reforms approved by the IIT Council in September, which recommended that M.Tech tuition fees be raised from ₹ 20,000 and ₹50,000 to ₹2 lakh gradual...

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