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21-year-old Sushant Rohilla would have been a fourth year student at Amity Law school (IP) had he been allowed to give his semester end exams.
Sushant hanged himself to death on 10 August, a step that friends and family say was a result of Amity’s arbitrary system of attendance and detention.
On Tuesday, students and alumni of the college stood outside the gates of the Noida campus demanding justice for Sushant. They want authorities to acknowledge the part they played in the tragedy, and to resign immediately.
What drove this boy to take a step as extreme as this?
Amity Law School is affiliated to Guru Gobind Singh Indraprastha University, Delhi, a fact that has led to much of the administrative mix up, said a student present at the protest.
In May, Sushant was reportedly told that he would be debarred from appearing in his exams due to his inability to fulfill the 75% attendance requirement but he could still progress to the next year. It was only in July that he was told that he would be detained for the entire year.
Both Amity college and IP University have indulged in a blame game, passing the buck on to each other.
While the college blames the university for its regressive attendance norms that are merely enforced by the college, protesting students said that the university had forwarded Sushant’s examination admit card to Amity.
The Quint reached out to an ex-student who provided a public document that seems to show that the onus does lies with the college.
Students named two people in particular, Mr BP Sehgal and Ms Isheeta Ritabhashi, who they claim have exercised dictatorial powers over the students in the past.
Sushant, on 11 May, had also sought last minute help from the Founder President of Amity University, Mr Ashok Chauhan, writing him an email, which did not receive any response.
The student body on Tuesday issued a statement blaming the college administration for Sushant’ s death.
Students have also alleged blatant apathy by authorities towards the entire incident.
The Quint emailed the college authorities for a comment, to which we received no reply.
“Sushant’s case is not a stand alone case. What this has done is unite all the students who have been getting harassed at the hands of the authorities for years now. Ex-students have taken to social media to give detailed accounts of their past harrowing experiences,” a visibly perturbed student told The Quint.
Alumni of the college have taken to Facebook, penning down their stories of alleged mental torture by the administration, on a page called ALSD Alumni Against Atrocities.
Besides the fact that they did not have any kind of redressal mechanism in college, the students said they had no one to take their complaints to either.
“If we even request, forget demand, the need for a student union, we are threatened saying our admits cards will be withheld. It’s disgusting, to say the least,” a student told The Quint.
“He was funny and we used to play Pokemon Go together,” Sushant’s sister Mehak Rohilla told The Quint.
He is remembered as a generous, helpful and extremely hard-working student by many of his friends.
“He was a guy who hardly ever complained. Sushant limped his way around college when he should have been on bed-rest,” Siddhant Bajaj, his friend said.
Sushant was fond of watching Suits, All India Bakchod videos and often took to Facebook to assert his opinions on topical issues.
Students present at the protest said they could never imagine him taking a step like this.
“He was more popular than several other students combined. He headed the debating society, he organised moot court sessions in college, ran around getting sponsorships,” a student told The Quint.
“You might already know how meritorious he was. But more than anything else, he was a brilliant human being. Students who have passed out even five years ago know and remember him,” she added.
Video Editor: Ashutosh Bhardwaj
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Published: 17 Aug 2016,07:21 AM IST