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Ansari confirms security breach on May 2 programme at AMU

Ansari confirms security breach on May 2 programme at AMU

Hamid Ansari

Hamid Ansari

New Delhi : Former Vice President M. Hamid Ansari on Saturday wrote a letter to Aligarh Muslim University Students Union (AMUSU) President Mashkoor Ahmed Usmani confirming that there was breach of security during May 2 programme.

“I have just received a letter from the former Vice President Hamid Ansari Sahab, in which he confirms the breach of his security on May 2,” Usmani said at a press conference late evening in the Union Hall of the university campus.

On May 2, Ansari was scheduled to visit the AMU at the invitation of the AMUSU that was to confer its lifetime membership — an honour also bestowed on Jinnah in 1938, which explains the presence of his portrait there — on the former Vice President and a former Vice Chancellor of the university.

IANS has reported that Ansari had to cut short his two-day programme and returned to Delhi soon after the incident as the local administration expressed its inability to provide him security cover.

In the letter, Ansari has thanked AMUSU for conferring on him life membership and also mentioned disruption caused by intruders and anti-social elements.

On May 3, Ansari was to deliver a lecture on pluralism in the Kennedy Hall at the varsity and in the evening attend a dinner hosted by the AMUSU. His schedule had been conveyed to the Aligarh administration in advance by Ansari’s office as per protocol.

Ansari reached the university on May 2 at the scheduled time, i.e. 1.00 p.m., and was lodged at the AMU guest house which is near the Baab-e-Syed Gate of the university.

A little later, a group of men, owing allegiance to the Hindu Yuva Vahini, an outfit founded and patronised by Uttar Pradesh Chief Minister Yogi Adityanath, started creating a ruckus near the administrative block of the university by raising objectionable slogans. The AMU security confronted them and handed them over to the Civil Lines police.

As per the statement of the AMU Proctor’s office to the police, the men returned barely after half an hour with more people — around 25-30 men, some of them equipped with pistols, lathis and stones — and shouting expletives and objectionable slogans against the AMU, tried to barge into the university through Baab-e-Syed Gate.

“The disruption, its precise timing, and the excuse manufactured for justifying it, raises question. The programme of the day, including an address by me in the Kennedy Auditorium, was publicly known,” Ansari wrote in the letter.

“The authorities concerned had been intimated officially and were cognizant of the standard arrangements including security for such occasions. In view of it, the access of the intruders to close proximity of the University gest house where I was staying remains unexplained,” the letter read.

Ansari also said that the peaceful protest by the students against this transgression was commendable, adding that they must ensure that it did not in any way interfere with their academic pursuits.

“Their request that action be taken against the intruders and disruptions, after a judicial inquiry, is justified,” the letter said.

—IANS

We are hopeful our demands would be met: AMU protesters

We are hopeful our demands would be met: AMU protesters

AMU protestersAligarh : The students protesting at the Baab-e-Syed gate of the Aligarh Muslim University (AMU) on Wednesday said that they were hopeful that the local administration would meet their demands.

The statement came after a delegation of the AMU Students Union (AMUSU) met senior officials on Wednesday including Additional Director General of Police Ajay Anand, the Inspector General of Police, the District Magistrate, the Senior Superintendent of Police and other officials.

“They have assured us that they would act on our demands and the results would be seen in two-three days,” AMUSU President Mashkoor Usmani told IANS after the meeting.

“ADG, Ajay Anand, also admitted that lathicharge on students was wrong and should have been avoided,” he added.

Usmani said that the ADG’s assurance has rekindled hopes that something would be done.

The protesting students have primarily three demands. One, that the police arrest at least some of the miscreants who forcibly entered the university campus on May 2 and created ruckus, and secondly quashing of FIR lodged against unknown students of the AMU.

The students and the Teachers Association is also demanding a judicial probe into the entire incident.

“However, despite the assurance we will not withdraw our protest until we see action on the ground,” AMUSU Secretary Fahad said.

The AMU Teachers Association too met the senior officials separately and reiterated the students’ demands.

The delegation of teachers also expressed concern at the “multiple security lapses” and “misjudgment” on the part of the local administration.

“We expressed concern at the multiple security lapses on that day. Former Vice President of India Hamid Ansari was on the campus on that day and the miscreants came within a few hundred metres of Ansari,” AMUSU President Professor Hamid Ali told IANS.

“The senior officers admitted to security lapses and assured that results would be seen in two-three days,” he added.

On Tuesday, around 10,000 students and their supporters formed a human chain on the campus to express their solidarity with the cause.

The final exams in the university are starting from May 12. Most students are carrying their books and notes to the protest site.

—IANS