Ninety
days and there’s still no end to the FTII stalemate in sight. With the
government showing no sign of backing down or softening its position on the
students’ demands, the latter have decided to intensify their agitation by
going on hunger strike. Besides, they would garner support from other
states for their cause.
Representational
image. PTI
The
hardening of stance comes after Abhijit Das, a faculty member who had entered
into a hunger strike on the Teachers’ Day (5 September), fell ill and was
forced to withdraw.
“It was for the first time that a faculty member had joined the strike in support of the students. When his condition deteriorated due to fasting, we forced him to withdraw. The strike has entered its 90th day and it seems to be an end of our career. We’ve now decided to follow the extreme path of fast-unto-death as the government has turned a deaf ear to our demands. Besides, students’ organizations and activist groups will conduct protest march in all the state capitals to express solidarity with our cause,” Devas Dixit, a final year student told Firstpost.
“It was for the first time that a faculty member had joined the strike in support of the students. When his condition deteriorated due to fasting, we forced him to withdraw. The strike has entered its 90th day and it seems to be an end of our career. We’ve now decided to follow the extreme path of fast-unto-death as the government has turned a deaf ear to our demands. Besides, students’ organizations and activist groups will conduct protest march in all the state capitals to express solidarity with our cause,” Devas Dixit, a final year student told Firstpost.
Meanwhile,
the government is silent over the findings of the three-member committee
appointed by the Information and Broadcasting (I&B) ministry into the
troubles within FTII. The committee, headed by SM Khan, Registrar of Newspapers
for India, members had visited Pune campus on 21 August and had rounds of
discussions with students, faculty members and the alumni association.
“We’ve
come to know that the committee has submitted its report to the ministry, but
nothing has been communicated to us. We’re completely in dark, which is making
the situation worse,” Devas added.
The
government has so far not commented on the findings of the committee. But a
source in the ministry said it disapproves of the students’ approach on their
demands. “From the demands of the FTII students, it seems that henceforth
the government should consult students’ bodies regarding appointments of vice
chancellors, chairpersons, directors and principals in the universities and
institutes. The issue has unnecessarily been over-stretched,” a ministry
official said on condition of anonymity.
FTII row opens a can of worms
Though
the issue of the appointment of the chairperson and other members has hogged
media limelight, and the 2008 batch emerged as a ‘bone of contention’, the real
problem began in 2001.
An
interim report by the Group of Experts headed by PK Nair, former director,
National Film Archive of India, in 2011 mentioned that it was not the students,
but the existing system within the FTII that was at fault.
A
copy of the report with the Firstpost mentions:
·
In
2000, a new experiment, known as the 1+1+1 plan was hurriedly introduced by the
administration, and it ended in disaster.
·
A
large number of semi-complete and incomplete students’ projects got piled up.
The three-year course stretched on until sixth year, causing strain on
students, teachers and administration.
·
Delays
due to lack of mechanisms to monitor maintenance of time schedules and
production budgets.
·
Infrastructural
bottlenecks.
·
Desperate
shortage of teachers and trained faculty members at the institute.
·
Unavailability
and inaccessibility of faculty at crucial junctures.
“Equipment
has been known to fail due to faulty maintenance, power cuts have disrupted
schedules, laboratories have caused delays and the office bureaucracy may take
days to obtain one signature for the release of required facilities…It is now
so much a part of life on the campus that any fresh candidate applying for the
FTII admission, we were told, is reconciled to the idea of staying for 5 years to
complete a three-year programme. How long can this deteriorated state of
affairs be allowed to continue?” Nair questioned in his report.
Another
note written to the government by Dr Kedarnath Awati, Acting Dean, Faculty of
Film at the institute has exposed the biggest anomaly, which is the
jurisdiction of the I&B Ministry over the institute. He has also mentioned
several causes of delay for the students to complete their curriculum.
Dr
Awati said in the note, “For I&B Ministry, the FTII is but a tiny blip on a
larger radar screen. We’ve been regarded as a media unit, rather than an
academic institution. To top it all, we’re not even an arm of the government,
like the National Film Archive of India. We’re an autonomous body run by a
Governing Council. The proposals sent to the ministry have languished.”
Awati
suggested, “It would have been better had the FTII been transferred lock, stock
and barrel to the Ministry of HRD. Because, at HRD Ministry, education is the
very life-blood and they understand the issues very clearly.”
Ranjit
Nair, a core committee member of the strike, added, “We have raised our concern
time and again but to no effect. The ministry and successive governments have
been negligent. They level accusations against the students instead. The
students have always protested against administrative failures. We have written
letters to the ministry through years, but those were tossed aside. The delay
in completion of the course has been going on since 2001.”
The controversy in nutshell
The
FTII students went on a strike protesting the appointment of Gajendra Chauhan
as chairperson and four other members (out of eight) of the board. The reason
stated was that the chairperson and the four members had strong Hindu right
wing connection and didn’t have a body of work to justify their positions at
FTII. The students’ body questioned the basis on which the appointments were
made.
But
gradually the 2008 batch of FTII emerged as the bone of contention, and it has
been said that the students of this batch have been instrumental in the strike
on the campus. And, this is the group of students virtually controlling the
campus for seven years. When the institute’s director Prashant Pathrabe asked
for an assessment of the projects of the 2008 batch students, he was gheraoed
and it resulted in a midnight police crackdown in August. Five students were
arrested and later released on bail.
Rahat Jain, a student of
screenplay writing, justified the strike saying, “It is not just to oust a
particular set of people but to strengthen the process. Regarding protests on
appointments, if you go through the list of previous chairmen and FTII Society
members, you will find them of a certain stature, repute and experience that is
completely lacking in the current appointments. We have always reiterated that
our strike is not against a particular government, but against the continuous
negligence of the institute by successive governments that has now boiled over
by the extent of the incapability of the latest appointments.”
Source-http://www.firstpost.com/india/govt-is-silent-on-why-gajendra-chauhan-should-head-ftii-with-students-planning-hunger-strike-stalemate-intensifies-2427720.html
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