The appellate authority which heard the appeals of the 21 JNU students who were penalised in connection with the controversial February 9 event has found all of them guilty of indiscipline even as the financial penalty imposed on some of them has been reduced.
"The panel has found guilty the 21 students who were penalised in connection with the February 9 event. The punishments still stand but fines imposed on few students have been reduced. Fresh letters informing the decision have been issued to students," a source said.
There was, however, no clarity on who all have benefited with reduction of penalty.
More From This Section
JNU was at the centre of a controversy in February this year because of an event on campus against hanging of Parliament attack convict Afzal Guru during which anti-national slogans were allegedly raised.
Three students including the students union president Kanhaiya Kumar were arrested in a sedition case over the event and are now out on bail. 21 JNU students were slapped with varied punishments ranging from rustication, hostel debarment to financial penalty on basis of the probe by the HLEC which found them guilty of violation of discipline norms.
The students had gone on an indefinite hunger strike against the decision which lasted for 16 days. As the varsity refused to relent and withdraw the punitive action proposed against the students despite their failing health, some students moved the Delhi High Court challenging the action.
Following this, the High Court issued directions to JNUSU to immediately withdraw the hunger strike and to not launch any fresh agitation. It had stayed action against the students till their appeals have been decided by the appellate authority.
JNU had then formed a four-member committee to hear appeals of those who had been found guilty of indiscipline by the varsity probe panel.
"Given the above situation, about 200 seats available in
JNU for 2017-18 academic year is still a large number in spite of the need to readjust the number of seats to be allotted to research scholars in various fields," the statement said.
According to the new admission policy, deprivation points are also being applied only to BA and MA courses this year and not to the research courses.
Several JNU schools, including the School of Computer and Systems Sciences, School of Computational and Integrative Sciences, and School of Biotechnology have announced zero intake this year.
In the School of Social Sciences, all 13 centres had announced intake last year, but this year only two can admit. Of these, the Centre for Study of Regional Development has provision for only one intake.
The application process for different courses began yesterday and will conclude on April 5.
The admissions to the courses in JNU are held through entrance examination and interview with 80 per cent weightage being given to the entrance exam and 20 per cent to viva.
Earlier, the university had decided to make the entrance as qualifying and give 100 per cent weightage to viva. But following protests from students, the 80:20 formula was arrived at.