"This is a critical issue and has been there for many years now. The prospectus mentioned the faculty has a total of 2400 seats following which the student came forward for enrollment.
"But after the BCI's recommendations the seats have been cut to half the number...We spoke to BCI and it said that if the university gives an undertaking to upgrade the infrastructure in a year, it will reconsider the recommendations," DUSU president Satender Awana said during a press conference.
The issue is being raised by all student groups active on campus including ABVP, AISA and NSUI, especially at a time when union elections are due next month.
The BCI has asked DU to shutdown colleges offering law courses in the evening shifts.
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The recommendation has been made after a committee of BCI, the apex regulatory body for legal education and legal profession in the country, submitted an adverse report about infrastructure and quality of education imparted at the centres of DU's law faculty.
In an unprecedented move, BCI had in 2014 decided to derecognize DU's law course after it failed to seek timely extension of the affiliation of its three centres, namely Campus Law Centre, Law Centre-I and Law Centre-II.
It was granted a provisional extension of affiliation for the 2014-15 session after DU had proposed to shift to a new building which it claimed "had adequate space" for the faculty to run properly.
However, after a fresh inspection by a BCI panel, the council had noted that besides fresh violations, the illegalities earlier highlighted remain unattended.
The council had in January communicated to the university to shutdown colleges offering law courses in evening shifts, saying such programmes do not ensure proper quality of legal education.