City
Epaper

'It Is Dangerous To Speak Up In India Today': Time

By IANS | Updated: March 21, 2021 17:55 IST

New Delhi, March 21 "It Is Dangerous To Speak Up In India Today", is the headline of a ...

Open in App

New Delhi, March 21 "It Is Dangerous To Speak Up In India Today", is the headline of a story in Time magazine which talks about what the resignations of 2 academics show about freedom of expression under the Narendra Modi government.

Two prominent academics stepped down from their positions at one of India's most respected universities this week, shining a spotlight on the state of academic freedom and a widening crackdown on dissent under the Hindu nationalist ruling party, the Time magazine report said.

Pratap Bhanu Mehta resigned from his position as a Professor of Political Science at Ashoka University near Delhi on Monday. In his letter of resignation, reproduced online Thursday, Mehta suggested that he had been forced to step down because of indirect pressure by the Indian government, the report said.

Arvind Subramanian, an Economics Professor at Ashoka who once served as Chief Economic Adviser to Prime Minister Narendra Modi, also resigned from his position on Thursday in solidarity with Mehta, calling his treatment an affront to "academic expression and freedom".

The report said the resignations are the latest example of what observers say is a tightening of academic freedoms, and dissent more broadly, driven by the ruling Hindu nationalist BJP.

In 2020, the US NGO Freedom House down ranked India's academic freedom score from three to two out of a possible four, "due to rising intimidation in recent years that is aimed at controlling academic discussion of politically sensitive topics".

In his resignation letter, Mehta suggested that he had been forced to step down because of indirect pressure on Ashoka University from the Indian government. "After a meeting with (the university's) Founders it has become abundantly clear to me that my association with the university may be considered a political liability," he wrote. "My public writing in support of a politics that tries to honour constitutional values of freedom and equal respect for all citizens, is perceived to carry risks for the university. In the interests of the university I resign."

The founders of Ashoka, a privately-funded university established in 2014 as India's answer to the Ivy League, had told Mehta in a meeting that his criticism of the Indian government was threatening the planned expansion of the university, according to an Ashoka employee with knowledge of the conversation, who requested anonymity out of concern for their job, the report said.

( With inputs from IANS )

Disclaimer: This post has been auto-published from an agency feed without any modifications to the text and has not been reviewed by an editor

Tags: delhiNew DelhiTimeArvind SubramanianNarendra ModiTime MagazineThe new delhi municipal councilDelhi south-westTim tim
Open in App

Related Stories

Cricket“It Feels Good When the Country’s Leader Himself…”: Suryakumar Yadav on PM Modi’s Praise After India’s Asia Cup 2025 Win (VIDEO)

NationalDelhi News: Three Killed in Suspected Hit-and-Run Accident in Jahangirpuri

NationalDelhi Bomb Threat: Schools and Airport Across City Receive Blast Email; Security Beefed Up at National Capital

NationalDelhi BMW Accident Case: Court Grants Bail to Accused Gaganpreet Kaur

NationalHaryana Accident: Five Killed, One Injured After Speeding Thar Collides With Divider on Delhi-Gurugram Expressway

National Realted Stories

NationalPM Narendra Modi Welcomes Donald Trump's Plans To End Gaza War, Says 'Pathway To Long-Term Peace'

NationalNavratri: Ashtami celebrations in Himachal's Naina Devi Temple draw thousands

NationalViable pathway to long-term, sustainable peace: PM Modi welcomes Trump's Gaza plan

NationalTN YouTuber Felix Gerald arrested over Karur stampede remarks

National'Outstanding leader', PM Modi expresses grief over demise of Vijay Kumar Malhotra