City
Epaper

IIT-Kharagpur faculty might move court over show-cause notices to professors

By IANS | Updated: December 6, 2024 22:30 IST

Kolkata, Dec 6 The faculty member of the Indian Institute of Technology-Kharagpur might move the Calcutta High Court ...

Open in App

Kolkata, Dec 6 The faculty member of the Indian Institute of Technology-Kharagpur might move the Calcutta High Court against the decision of the authorities to serve show-cause notices to 86 professors of the institute, Indian Institute of Technology Teachers’ Association (IITTA) sources said.

The decision comes amid several members of this iconic institute of the country holding a sit-in-protest against the show-cause notice as well as the decision to replace three departmental heads within the institute in the last two days.

IITTA insiders claimed that the sit-in protest might also be followed by a hunger strike by some of the protesting faculty members of IIT-Kharagpur.

The protesting faculty members have already sought the intervention of the Chairman of the Board of Governors in the matter.

The show-cause notice was issued following a letter from the association to Union Education Minister Dharmendra Pradhan in September this year, where the faculty members of IIT-Kharagpur accused the institute Director V.K. Tiwari of "favouritism and vindictiveness" in faculty selection.

In the petition, the faculty members also requested the Union minister to ensure the appointment of a new Director after Tiwari’s tenure ends in January next year.

The show-cause notice was served after that and the replacement of the three departmental heads followed. These include Niloy Ganguly of the artificial intelligence (AI) department, Adrijit Goswami from mathematics and Nihar Ranjan Jana, who was the chairperson of the central research facility (life science division) of the institute. They were among the faculty members who were served with show-cause notices.

The IIT authorities, however, had dismissed the allegations raised by the faculty members and described them as "disruptive propaganda". The authorities also claimed that the allegations labelled by a section of the faculty member lacked credibility.

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

Open in App

Related Stories

TechnologyPoor heart health may signal gestational diabetes risk in pregnancy: Study

HealthPoor heart health may signal gestational diabetes risk in pregnancy: Study

NationalTrain services resume in parts of NE after a day's disruption

NationalI urge people to visit Kashmir without fear, says Shivraj Chouhan

EntertainmentNetizens in Awe of Sara Ali Khan’s Performance in Metro… In Dino, Say, “So Simple, But so Heartfelt

Technology Realted Stories

TechnologyIndian Oil using solar power at 36,000 retail outlets in push to green energy: Hardeep Puri

TechnologyRBI withdraws Rs 1 lakh crore from banking system through VRRR auction to tackle surplus liquidity

TechnologyAustralian study establishes new framework for deep-sea mining impact assessment

TechnologyShubhanshu Shukla's parents await his return, share experience of watching mesmerising sunrise from space

TechnologyDefence stocks up over govt’s Rs 1.05 lakh crore procurement drive