In solidarity with the dissenting student community in India

4 March 2016

As academics, students, writers, artists and activists from Australia, we condemn the use of oppressive power by the Indian state, its police, and Hindu fundamentalist groups to shut down voices of dissent emerging from within public universities in India.

We join the international community in extending our support to the students, faculty and staff at Jawaharlal Nehru University (JNU), Hyderabad Central University (HCU) and many other public universities, who have been courageously protesting the overreach of state power and brutal stifling of dissent, carried out in the guise of majoritarian Hindu nationalism (Hindutva).

Students at JNU and HCU have been targeted for opposing the death penalty awarded to Afzal Guru and Yakub Memon, convicted for “terrorism” by the Supreme Court of India. Students’ opposition to the death penalty – an act of violence carried out by the state to assert its sovereign might – has been manipulated by the state, university administrators, and irresponsible media reports, to be understood as their support for “terrorists”, and thus considered treasonous.

The labelling of student activists as “anti-national” by invoking the draconian law on sedition (a legacy of British colonial rule), is a blatant attack on academic freedom. These attacks have been orchestrated by the BJP regime to strike fear among citizens who question its practices of anti-minority religious hate mongering and xenophobic propaganda.

HCU student Rohith Vemula was suspended and driven to suicide because of the way the university administration and the state intimidated and threatened him. These attacks on students and free speech are not aberrations or sudden spurts of violence. Rather, they are part of a pattern of attacks on every idea and expression that does not pander to fascist Hindutva ideology.

We deplore the attack on journalists, students, academics and activists by the lawyers at the Patiala House Court premises. The silence and inaction of the police in controlling this situation only testify to the state’s complicity in these events. We are appalled by the jingoistic and prejudiced reporting by some media channels to vilify JNU student activists Kanhaiya Kumar and Umar Khalid.

We endorse the demands made by the protesting students, staff and faculty at JNU and HCU. We demand:

a) the immediate release of the Kanhaiya Kumar, President of the JNU Student Union, and Umar Khalid and Anirban Bhattacharya;

b) that the Bar Council of India enquiry into the attacks on journalists and protestors in Patiala House Court be carried out without political manipulation;

c) that there should be no further intimidation and arrests of student activists for carrying out peaceful protests;

d) the government must preserve the autonomy of universities and de-militarise campuses.

We acknowledge that our solidarity is being extended from territory occupied by a settler colonial state. We also acknowledge that the Indigenous peoples who have not ceded their sovereignty, own this land. This acknowledgement is a necessary precondition for building transnational solidarity against governments – like those in India and Australia – that use democracy and national security as alibis for legitimising their everyday violence.

Endorsed By:

1. Debolina Dutta, PhD Researcher and Lawyer, Melbourne Law School, University of Melbourne

2. Oishik Sircar, Teaching Fellow and Doctoral Researcher, Institute for International Law and the Humanities, Melbourne Law School

3. Samia Khatun, Postdoctoral Research Fellow, Department of History, University of Melbourne

4. Shakira Hussein, Hon. Research Fellow, The University of Melbourne

5. Mridula Nath Chakraborty, Academic, Monash University

6. Irfan Ahmad, Associate Professor of Political Anthropology, ACU, Melbourne, Australia

7. Rajgopal Saikumar, PhD Candidate, The Australian National University

8. James Goodman, Associate Professor, University of Technology Sydney

9. Kama Maclean, Associate Professor, UNSW

10. Monique Hameed, Tutor, University of Melbourne

11. Jordy Silverstein, Postdoctoral Research Associate, University of Melbourne

12. Heather Goodall, Professor Emerita in History, University of Technology Sydney

13. Sukhmani Khorana, Lecturer, University of Wollongong

14. Dr Zeena Elton, Independent Researcher/Writer

15. Trish May, PhD student, UNSW

16. Maryam Alavi Nia, PhD Candidate, UNSW

17. Assa Doron, Academic , Australian National University

18. Meera Ashar, Lecturer (Assistant Professor), The Australian National University

19. Samanthi Gunawardana, Lecturer, Monash University

20. Josh Cullinan, Secretary, Australia Bangladesh Solidarity Network

21. Dr Lionel Bopage, Retired Public Servant, n/a

22. Neeti Aryal Khanal, PhD candidate, Monash University

23. Erin Watson-Lynn, Lecturer, Monash University

24. Roanna Gonsalves, Writer and academic, UNSW

25. Michelle de Kretser, Writer, University of Sydney

26. Dr Ruth De Souza, Stream Leader, Research, Policy and Evaluation, , Centre for Culture, Ethnicity and Health

27. Hannah Courtney, PhD Candidate, UNSW

28. Dr Danny Butt, Lecturer, Centre for Cultural Partnerships, Victorian College of the Arts, University of Melbourne

29. John Zubrzycki, PhD Candidate, University of New South Wales

30. Ben Spies-Butcher, Senior Lecturer, Macquarie University, Australia

31. Camilla Palmer, Postgraduate Researcher, University of New South Wales

32. Brenda Dobia, Senior Lecturer, Western Sydney University

33. Coel Kirkby, Postdoctoral Fellow, Melbourne Law School

34. Elizabeth King, Student, UNSW

35. Rajpaul Sandhu, Teaching, ACS

36. David Feith, Subject Coordinator, Humanities, Monash College

37. Wimal Jayakody, Member of PHRE

38. Steve Pereira , Community Engagement, Melbourne University

39. Anura, Real Estate Sales, PHRE

40. Sithy Marikar, Vice President - AGGSl, Australian Labor Party

41. S. R. Sivasubramaniam, Engineer

42. Padraic Gibson, Senior Researcher, Jumbunna Indigenous House of Learning, University of Technology Sydney

43. Vandana Ram, Artist

44. Victoria Baldwin, Administrator

45. Robin Jeffrey, Retired Academic

46. Nadia Rhook, Lecturer, Latrobe University

47. Mohamed Masood, President, Werribee Islamic Centre

48. Anthony P. D'Costa, Chair and Professor of Contemporary Indian Studies, University of Melbourne

49. Yamini Narayanan, ARC DECRA Senior Research Fellow, Deakin University

50. Monimalika Sengupta, PhD Candidate, Monash University

51. Parichay Patra, Doctoral Candidate, Monash University, Australia

52. Lucy Honan, Teacher, Australian Education Union Councillor

53. Arka Chattopadhyay, PhD student, University of Western Sydney

54. Rev.Dato' Dr.Sumana Siri, Buddhist Cardinal of Europe, Buddhist Realists' Movement, U.K.,Italy & France

55. Kalpana Ram, Associate Professor of Anthropology, Macquarie University

56. Dr Sagar Sanyal, Adjunct lecturer, University of Melbourne

57. Piergiorgio Moro, Secretary, Australia Asia Worker Links

58. Beth Sometimes, Researcher, VCA, Melbourne University

59. Russell Smith, Lecturer, Australian National University

60. Anuparna Mukherjee, Ph.D. Researcher, ANU

61. Amy Thomas, PhD Candidate, University of Technology, Sydney

62. Shak Sandhu, Restaurant Manager

63. Stephen Church, Doctoral Student/Casual Lecturer & Tutor, University of New South Wales

64. Angela Smith, Researcher, North Africa Mixed Migration Task Force

65. Balraj Sangha, Justice Of The Peace, Australian Labor Party

66. Emma Torzillo, Medical Doctor, University of Sydney and Royal Prince Alfred Hospital, Sydney

67. Anne Brewster, Associate Professor, UNSW

68. Lalitha Chelliah, Nurse, 3 CR Broadcaster; Socialist Alliance member

69. Max Kaiser, PhD Candidate, University of Melbourne

70. Dr Amanda Gilbertson, McKenzie Postdoctoral Fellow, University of Melbourne

71. Faisal Al-Asaad, Graduate Research, University of Melbourne

72. Jerome Small, Industrial Organiser, Socialist Alternative

73. Milo Adler-Gillies, Student, Paris 8

74. Priya Chacko, Lecturer, University of Adelaide

75. Vivien Seyler, Administrative Officer, South Asian Studies Association of Australia

76. Bina Fernandez, Senior Lecturer, University of Melbourne

77. Ghassan Hage, Professor, University of Melbourne

78. Maria Elander, Lecturer in Criminology, School of Social and Political Sciences, University of Melbourne

79. Edward Mussawir, Lecturer, Griffith University

80. Julia Lomas, PhD Candidate, Art History And Theory, Monash University

81. Chris Andrews, Associate Professor, Western Sydney University

82. Ben Silverstein, Lecturer, UNSW

83. Alexandra Watkins, Academic, Deakin University

84. Isabella Ofner, Researcher and Lecturer, The University of Melbourne

85. Bina D'Costa, Academic, Department of International Relations, The Australian National University

86. Shweta Kishore, Teaching Associate, Monash University

87. Léuli Eshraghi, PhD Candidate, Monash University

88. Dr. Ridwanul Hoque, Visiting Scholar at La Trobe Law School, La Trobe University

89. Kristen Smith, Medical Anthropologist, University of Melbourne

90. Joan Nestle, Independent Writer

91. Adrian McNeil, Senior Lecturer, Monash University

92. Parakrama Niriella, Theatre and Film Director, National Federation of Theatre Artists Sri Lanka

93. Cait Storr, Sessional lecturer and PhD candidate, Melbourne Law School

94. Greg Bailey, Hon. Research Fellow in Asian Studies (Sanskrit), La Trobe University

95. Ian Woolford, Lecturer, La Trobe University

96. Michael Stevenson, Retired

97. Dolly Kikon, Department of Anthropology and Development Studies, University of Melbourne

98. Jasmine Ali, Researcher, RMIT University

99. Dr Kuntala Lahiri-Dutt, Senior Fellow, Resource, Environment & Development Program, Crawford School of Public Policy, The Australian National University

100. Alison Young, Professor, University of Melbourne

101. Usha Natarajan, Law Professor, American University in Cairo

102. Ekta Sharma, Poet & Activist

103. Rose Parfitt, Research Fellow, Melbourne Law School

104. Suzette Mayr, PhD Student, University of New South Wales

105. Leigh Hopkinson, Writer

106. Amy Parish, PhD Candidate, UNSW

107. Samantha Balaton-Chrimes, Lecturer in International Studies, Deakin University

108. Audrey Yue, Associate Professor, The University of Melbourne

109. Ben Hillier, Editor, Red Flag newspaper


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