Senior IIMC faculty resigns, says was being targeted by govt

The professor quit after an order was issued transferring him to the premier media school's campus

Indian Institute of Mass Communication
Press Trust of India New Delhi
Last Updated : Mar 04 2016 | 8:00 PM IST
A senior faculty member of Indian Institute of Mass Communication (IIMC) today resigned alleging that he was "targeted" by the I&B Ministry for supporting the protests over Dalit student Rohith Vemula's suicide and JNU and FTII issues.

Amit Sengupta, an Associate Professor in the department of English Journalism, quit after an order was issued transferring him to the premier media school's campus in Odisha's Dhenkanal district, which he slammed as a "political decision".

"I have been targeted because I supported the solidarity protest for Rohith Vemula in the campus, organised independently by students of IIMC in which other faculty members too participated. I have been targeted also because I supported the JNU and FTII students," Sengupta wrote in his resignation letter.

Read more from our special coverage on "JNU ROW"

Refuting allegations of politically targeting the IIMC faculty, a senior Information and Broadcasting Ministry official claimed that certain acts of Sengupta suggesting "indiscipline" had come to the notice of the authorities including his attempts to "politicise" the campus through posts on social media.
 

 

However, the official also added that Sengupta's services had only been "temporarily" placed in Dhenkanal in view of shortage of faculty on that campus.

Reacting to the charges, Sengupta said views expressed on social media fell on his personal domain and was his "constitutional right".

"I am proud of standing up for Rohith Vemula and will continue to do so in the days to come. This is my constitutional right. I think grave injustice has been done to him and the students of Hyderabad Central University. I will always stand and fight for Dalit rights.

"I think both the struggles (JNU and FTII) are glorious and the country will enrich itself with the great leap of imagination and the brilliant content of the peaceful, democratic debate the students and faculty of these great institutions have generated," Sengupta, a former journalist, said.

 

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First Published: Mar 04 2016 | 7:38 PM IST

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