23/03/2021
*Statement from the Students' Action Committee and Call for an Online Meet*
1. In light of the recent spike in Covid-19 cases, the Telangana state government has ordered a temporary shutdown of all educational institutions except medical colleges. The Education Minister has specified that the hostels of schools and colleges – both public and private – will also be closed.
What this means for our movement is that we are not in a position to proceed with our protest activities for now. Section 3.2 (i) of the latest UGC guidelines for reopening of campuses (dated Nov 5, 2020) makes it a prerequisite for central universities too that “the concerned State Government must have declared the area safe for reopening of educational institutions”.
The latest government order doesn't mark out any specific regions as unsafe; it has ordered a state-level shut down of educational institutions, which comes with the possible legal implication that Telangana as a whole is currently unsafe for educational institutions to be open. Whether the order may be interpreted differently is a matter to be fought out in courts.
Regardless of where the law stands, the fact remains that the Indian state and its institutions, including public universities, have repeatedly deserted the common masses (including students) and forced them to fend for themselves. We have seen the travesty of simply imposing a lockdown without any state support.
Asking students to simply remain in their homes is to leave them on their own without any institutional support. Public universities must do more, including facilitating a safe environment at least for those who are most vulnerable in their homes due to socio-economic and other factors.
This requires a collective student movement against the Indian state – one that cannot be carried out at the level of just one or two universities.
With the above considerations in mind, the committee proposes to temporarily call off our ongoing protest.
While there may be too few academic days left for final year students to hope to reenter the hostels, the demand for hostel reopening will remain pertinent for the majority of the student body.
Also, given the anti-student ways of the EFLU administration, they may not make any plans or preparations to reopen the hostels and other essential amenities even after the state government reopens its educational institutions, in which case we will have to resume our struggle.
2. The TA-EC did not respond to our request for a meeting on March 23. We proposed to meet at 6 PM, but the news about the order had come in by then. Ideally, the proposal to pause our protest should have been discussed by the TA-EC and the SAC together, but since the beginning, they have adopted a high-handed approach towards us and ignored our emails.
That being said, we thank the few members within the TA who have been truly supportive of our cause and who tried their best.
3. We invite everyone to join an online meet at 9 PM on March 24 (Wednesday) to discuss the situation and reach a concrete decision on the first point above.
We also need to discuss how we, as a student community, can remain organised in the long term despite this short-term crisis.
Please join our meeting via this link:
https://meet.google.com/sqx-juob-dxw