BJP hints at damage control at Visva-Bharati after Centre seeks withdrawal of controversial plaques
The Hindu
A row had erupted with the Visva-Bharati University administration putting up plaques at the University to commemorate the inclusion of Santiniketan as a UNESCO World Heritage Site
With the Ministry of Human Resource Development seeking withdrawal of controversial plaques at Visva-Bharati University, a section of Bharatiya Janata Party (BJP) leaders from West Bengal are hinting at the move as a “damage control and course correction” ahead of Lok Sabha polls next year.
A row had erupted with the Visva-Bharati University administration putting up plaques at the University to commemorate the inclusion of Santiniketan as a UNESCO World Heritage Site. The plaque had the name of Prime Minister Narendra Modi as ‘Acharya Chancellor ‘ and Bidyut Chakraborty as ‘Upacharya Vice-Chancellor’, but had no mention of Rabindranath Tagore, who founded the institution. Three plaques were put up in the university premises after Santiniketan got the UNESCO tag on September 17.
BJP national secretary Anupam Hazra said that the controversy around the plaques was “unwarranted” and it gave Trinamool Congress an opportunity to hold protests in the university and target the BJP and the Prime Minister.
“The former Vice-Chancellor, Bidyut Chakrabarty, may have had a personal agenda behind putting up the plaques. But in doing so he maligned the BJP leadership and the office of Prime Minister who is the Chancellor of the University. There are no consent from the Prime Minister’s Officer to set up such plaques at the university” Mr. Hazra told The Hindu.
The BJP leader, who had represented Birbhum’s Bolpur Constituency as a Trinamool Congress MP from 2014-19, said that the move by the Centre also hints at a “damage control”. “The decision by the Centre to have fresh plaques with the name of Rabindranath Tagore is the correct decision,” Mr. Hazra said.
The tenure of Mr. Chakrabarty as Vice-Chancellor of the university came to an end on November 8 and an officiating V-C Sanjoy Kumar Mallik took charge of the university administration.
The regime of Prof. Chakrabarty was marked with controversy, including that involving another Nobel laureate professor Amartya Sen. The Visva-Bharati was embroiled in a legal tussle with Prof. Sen claiming that the economist had illegally acquired a portion of land on which his ancestral house Pratichi was built.
“We are judges and therefore, cannot act like Mughals of a bygone era ... the writ courts in the guise of doing justice cannot transcend the barriers of law,” the High Court of Karnataka observed while setting aside an order of a single judge, who in 2016 had extended the lease of a public premises allotted to a physically challenged person to 20 years contrary to 12-year period stipulated in the law.
The High Court of Karnataka on Monday declined to interfere, at present, in the investigation against a Bharatiya Janata Party worker, who is among the accused persons facing charges of circulating obscene clips, related to “morphed” images and videos clips related to Prajwal Revanna, former Hassan MP, in public domain through pen drives and other modes.