administration and JNUSU continued today with both sides trading charges and the VC Jagdesh Kumar accusing the students occupying the administration block of trying to make the university "dysfunctional" through their "illegal" siege.
The protests over UGC notification on PhD/MPhil admissions approved by decision making bodies of JNU, spilled outside the campus as scores of students, teachers and alumni participated in a march from Mandi House to Parliament and held a protest meeting at Jantar Mantar when stopped by police on the way.
Parliamentarians D Raja, Ali Anwar and Digvijay Singh, also addressed the meeting along with JNU Teachers Association (JNUTA) leaders, criticising the university administration for present situation on the campus.
Ever since the evening of February 9, the entire administration building is under "siege" by JNUSU-led students occupying the space inside the building and some other student groups "blocking" entry and exit from outside, he said.
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"Hundreds of staff and officers, including the Vice Chancellor, are debarred from carrying out their day-to-day work by just a small number of unruly students," he said.
JNUSU accused Kumar of not meeting the students and making "arbitrary" decisions and "fundamental" changes in JNU's admission policy and research programmes.
Replacing JNU's topic-based system of allotting supervisors to students with supervisor allotment based on a specified number of students per faculty, will destroy quality of research in JNU which is India's best central university, he said.
The students' union began its hunger strike 15 days ago days against the imposition of the 2016 UGC notification by the JNU administration at the Administration Block.
"When the VC office gave an appointment to meet the student representatives on February 13, it was rebuffed," he said.