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Students across all four campuses of the Tata Institute of Social Sciences (TISS) are sitting in protest against what they perceive is “a direct attack on social justice”.
The TISS administration recently announced its decision to withdraw a fee-waiver offered to the SC, ST and OBC students eligible for the Centre's Post Matric Scholarship (GOI-PMS). The policy was made mandatory for the students falling under the OBC category in 2015.
TISS has campuses in Mumbai, Hyderabad, Guwahati and Tuljapur.
According to the administration’s recent decision, the students who fall under this category and were earlier funded by the university, will now have to pay the same fee as those belonging to the “open” category, which includes tuition fees, dining hall fee and hostel fee.
In response, the students have been sloganeering and boycotting classes since 21 February, and in TISS Hyderabad, six students even reportedly held a hunger strike on 27 February.
Other than the demand for the administration to reinstate the fee-waiver that was offered to the SC/ST/OBC students under the GOI-PMS Scholarship, the main demand behind the hunger-strike was for the acting director of TISS, who they say have never visited them in the Hyderabad campus, to visit and simply hear them out.
In response, the Acting Director Shalini Bharat reportedly visited the campus on the same day. However, as Arjun Mukherjee, Secretary of the Student Union at TISS Hyderabad, told The Quint, the fact that it took students to sit for a hunger strike for the administration to take note was something that needed to be questioned.
In TISS Mumbai, students were devising new strategies to get the attention of both the government and the TISS administration.
Before the start of the protests on 21 February, the students said they had approached both the administration and the academic council on multiple occasions, requesting them to hear out their demands. They had also drafted a mail that stated their demands to the chairman of the governing council, but had received little to no response from all the parties.
The only argument that the TISS administration presented them with was that they were not receiving the necessary funds from the UGC for them to carry on offering these fee-waivers to the students eligible for the GoI-PMS scholarship.
In the Guwahati and Tuljapur campuses too, students have been agitating against the administration’s decision, worried about their academic futures at the university if it didn’t get revoked.
The Quint spoke to several of the students across the four campuses, who stood to get directly affected by the administration’s decision to revoke the fee-waiver. Many of them hail from families which have an annual income between Rs 1 lakh and 2 lakh.
For the students whose family’s monthly salary is less than Rs 30,000 a month, it is impossible for them to pay the full fee of Rs 72,000-Rs 76,000 (rounded up) for a single semester.
While some of them viewed this move by the government and in turn the administration as one to discourage the social, economic and academic progress of the minority classes, others believe it to be a direct indication of privatisation of education.
While the students continue their protests for the administration to resume their fee-waiver for the students eligible for the GoI-PMS scholarship, they battle with the daily fear that if the policy holds through, they may be forced to drop out of the institution completely.
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