Alleging that "political interference" has brought the administrative machinery of Allahabad University to a "standstill", its Vice-Chancellor has threatened to leave with his associates and said MPs or MLAs can be made VCs instead of acamedicians to toe the government line.
"This is a central university and used to be called the Oxford of the East in the past. There can be no possibility of the institution regaining its lost glory if political interference continues," Allahabad University VC, R L Hangloo, who recently drew flak from BJP leaders over his handling of a students agitation, told reporters here.
He alleged that many politicians belonging to Congress, BJP, SP AVBP, are involved in the university affairs and the varsity will not grow if politicians interfere.
"We want to take the university on the path of excellence and this is a jolt to our aim. All my associates are saying this is a jolt to the university and politicians are hampering the university's growth. The political interference is a setback for the university," said Hangloo.
"If politicians continue to interfere, we all will have to leave. Then government can run the university as per their opinion. Then it would be better to have MLAs or MPs as VCs in place of acamedicians," Hangloo said yesterday.
He was responding to questions about the varsity's decision, announced yesterday, to keep offline option open for entrance tests for post-graduate courses in the upcoming academic session.
The decision, whereby the university reversed its earlier stance that entrance tests would be held only through the online mode, is understood to have followed a meeting between some BJP MPs and HRD Minister Smriti Irani.
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The BJP lawmakers are said to have brought to Irani's notice that a number of students' union leaders, including its vice president and general secretary who belong to Akhil Bharatiya Vidyarthi Parishad (ABVP), were on a hunger strike to press the demand for the offline option, saying it was important for candidates hailing from remote areas with poor internet connectivity.
Hangloo said that the HRD Ministry should "not interfere" in this., as "politics" is involved in it.
"First there were only four persons on strike. And they were on strike because of their own problems and they don't think of the university," he said.
A group of BJP MPs and MLAs had on May 5 visited the varsity and criticised the VC for "mishandling" the students' stir.
They had taken exception to the university administration lodging a police complaint against the union leaders for staging a demonstration in front of the VC's office earlier this month.
Subsequently, a few of the BJP MPs had met Irani and an ensuing communication from the HRD Ministry is said to have prompted the varsity authorities to modify its decision.
Hangloo has been repeatedly accused by the students' union president Richa Singh of being partisan towards those owing allegiance to BJP and the Sangh Parivar.
In March, Singh, who is a Samajwadi Party member had charged the VC with ordering a "politically motivated" inquiry against her on the basis of "flimsy" complaints from her ABVP rivals.
The latest crisis, however, witnessed the union leaders burying their differences and putting up a joint fight.
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Meanwhile, sources said Hangloo had yesterday written a letter to Rajya Sabha Chairman M Hamid Ansari in which he has claimed that Irani or her officers have "never interfered" with the functioning of the university.
Mr. Mohit Shukla, MD & Head of India-Legal, Barclays,
Barclays Bank PLC was of the view that even though lawyers are now being invited to management committee level discussion in board rooms, many companies still see in-house lawyers only as a support entity for formulation of principles and business-legal decisions.
According to Mr. Yogesh Wadhwa, Vice President and Lead Counsel, General Motors India, striking a feasible balance between what is legally correct and what is ethically correct is extremely important in any business. There are some legal areas which are of specific relevance for certain types of business. "In-house counsels must have a deep understanding of the employment as well as all the subject matters of solicitation, especially of the country where they operate, for an insightful risk analysis of businesses per se and to settle dispute resolutions," he noted.
Distinguished members at the roundtable also agreed that law schools in India needed to play an instrumental role in shaping quality workforce for this profession.
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