Sopory, who demits office on January 27, says the outside world only looks at the political happenings on the campus but the fact that the varsity produces brightest of the minds gets ignored.
"People often talk about political activism on JNU campus but rarely anyone talks about the academic activism here. The varsity is never projected in that sense. We have roughly around 300 national and international seminars every year. Students here write and edit quality books, but the outside world only looks at the political things happening on the campus," he told PTI in an interview.
"People have a right to talk about JNU, critcise it, but I personally feel very trivial issues get magnified many times, which shouldn't happen," he said.
This is not the first time he has objected to the 'political activism' tag.
Last November, Sopory had lashed out at the comments made by a pro-RSS journal that JNU was home to "huge anti-national block", saying the varsity is home to "intellectuals" and not anti-nationals and has contributed considerably to nation building.
According to Sopory, his two major achievements are the
NAAC accreditation granted to the university and revamping of its sexual harassment policy.
The JNU, which had attracted criticism for maximum number of sexual harassment complaints by any educational institution in Delhi in the last two years, had last month notified a revamped sexual harassment policy which also included penalty provisions for false complaints.
"It should not be seen in a negative context that we received the maximum complaints. We got them because we have a platform to report such cases which in other universities might be going unreported due to lack of appropriate provisions or platform," he added.
Sopory took over as eleventh vice-chancellor of JNU in January 2011.
An eminent plant molecular biologist, Sopory began his academic career in 1973 as a faculty at the School of Life Sciences, Jawaharlal Nehru University.
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