Demand for probe into
death of a physically challenged student of the institute
Beyond the imposing main
gate of the sprawling campus of the National Institute of Technology, Calicut,
(NIT-C), hundreds of students dressed in black tee shirts and arm-bands crowded
the exit points of the institute director’s office on Monday.
They were seeking the
truth behind the death of Mannam Venkateshwaralu, their physically challenged
college mate, who died on Saturday, February 15. Nineteen-year- old Computer
Science student Venkateshwaralu died after a wall on the campus collapsed on
him.
But all that the students
got from the authorities were scattered phrases of comfort and indefinite
promises of a safer campus.
The evening’s exchange in
the presence of institute Director M.N. Bandhopadhyay was meant to openly
discuss a five-point agenda raised by the students. The agenda prepared by the
Student Action Council included demands like fixing the compensation amount to
be offered to the parents of Venkateshwaralu, tendering contract for a fully
functional medical facility on the institute premises, setting up an empowered
internal committee for survey and regulation of civil structures of NIT-C, a
full-scale probe into the tragic incident, and finally to facilitate a forum
every month in which students could raise grievances to the institute director
and deans.
Earlier in the day,
friends of Venkateshwaralu saw off his parents, who came to take his body back
to their native in Guntur in Andhra Pradesh after post-mortem at the Kozhikode
government medical college hospital. In a letter addressed to the director, the
victim’s family sought Rs.68 lakh as compensation.
Following loud protests
from students, the authorities agreed to form a panel to propose a compensation
amount for the consideration of the institute’s Board of Governors. However,
authorities refused to commit on a specific date for finalising the
compensation amount.
When contacted at 9.30
p.m., students said they were asked to leave the premises by the police. They
said they would be meeting the authorities on Tuesday morning.
Notice from registrar
The Registrar, NIT-C, has
issued a notice that the institute will be closed indefinitely in view of the
“unauthorised assembly” of students on the campus on February 15 and 17. The
notice directed the students to vacate their hostel rooms by 10 a.m. on February
18. “Any individual presence in the institute’s hostels will be considered as
trespass and suitable action will be taken against him or her,” it said.
The decision, it said, was
taken after a meeting with deans, board of governors and heads of departments
at the director’s office on the advice of the police.
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