The campus photocopy shop owners claim that it is due to the "fear factor" that they are refusing to to print posters of protests, but the students alleged that the varsity administration has instructed them to do so, a charge denied by JNU Registrar Bhupinder Zutshi.
"Two policemen in plain clothes came last night to my shop and asked me to identify the posters that I had printed. I told them that we do not check what is written on them and casually go ahead printing number of copies asked by the students," a photocopy kiosk owner in JNU campus told PTI on condition of anonymity.
Agitated over the "attack on their democracy", the JNU Students Union (JNUSU) said in a statement, "it has come to our notice that the JNU administration has instructed all the photocopy shops in the campus not to print any posters or pamphlets of any student organisation. JNUSU strongly condemns this draconian, undemocratic decision."
"In JNU, pamphlets and posters have always been a crucial part of the process of speaking truth to power. This has clearly irked the powers-that-be. We cannot allow such an assault on democratic spaces under any dubious pretext," it added.
When contacted, JNU Registrar Bhupinder Zutshi said, " the university has not sent any verbal or written communication to the photocopy shop owners on campus. They run independently and if at all they have denied to do the printing they would have taken independent decisions. The administration has no role to play in it".