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Scholar suicide: JNU students begin indefinite hunger strike

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Press Trust of India New Delhi
Last Updated : Jan 24 2016 | 4:57 PM IST
Amid growing outrage over the alleged suicide of a Hyderabad Central University (HCU) Dalit research scholar Rohith Vemula, students of Jawaharlal Nehru University today launched an indefinite hunger strike demanding justice for him.
Three students of the varsity -- Suchishree, Lenin Kumar and Shubhanshu -- have decided to sit on the fast to express solidarity with the seven students who were on an indefinite hunger strike at Hyderabad University. They were forcibly hospitalised yesterday on the fourth day of the stir. A group of another seven students today sat on an indefinite hunger strike there.
Other students from JNU will join the trio for a relay hunger strike over the issue, said Lenin Kumar, former president of JNU's students union.
"The environment in which Rohith was forced to kill himself is faced by millions of Dalit students who manage to reach higher education with great difficulty in our country. His suicide note will remain a powerful testimony to how our higher education system has institutionalized discrimination and hardships for Dalits," he said.
Suchishree, who has also written an open letter to the government, said, "The only political motive that I have as a political individual is that no more institutional murders should take place in this country. This indefinite hunger strike, I do not see as an appeal to the state, but as a mean to regain from the state the basic human dignity that is rightfully ours."
Various student groups have been protesting over the issue in the national capital since last week.

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26-year-old Vemula Rohit, a Dalit PhD scholar, was found hanging at the Central University's hostel room on January 17.
Union Labour Minister Bandaru Dattatreya and Hyderabad University Vice Chancellor were named in an FIR over the death of the scholar, which triggered massive protests and demands for their removal from their posts.
The issue also took a political turn with allegations that the extreme action was a result of discrimination against Dalit students after Dattatreya had written a letter to Union HRD Minister Smriti Irani seeking action against their "anti-national acts".
In a bid to defuse the raging controversy, the Centre had last week decided to set up a judicial commission to go into the dalit student's suicide in Hyderabad University, which announced an ex-gratia payment of Rs.8 lakh to his family but protests continued.
Even as Prime Minister Narendra Modi broke his silence and expressed grief over the death of Vemula, the students are demanding the removal of Union Ministers Smriti Irani and Bandaru Dattatreya and the Vice Chancellor.

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First Published: Jan 24 2016 | 4:57 PM IST

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