New Delhi: The Delhi High Court on Tuesday asked the Delhi University (DU) to file its response within three days on a plea by PhD Scholar and National Secretary of National Students’ Union of India Lokesh Chugh challenging his debarment by the university for a year over allegations that he organised a screening of the BBC documentary about Prime Minister Narendra Modi.
For a year, Lokesh Chugh of the National Students Union of India (NSUI) was prohibited from taking any university, college, or departmental exams. Chugh is Ph.D. research scholar at the Department of Anthropology at DU.
Justice Purushaindra Kumar Kaurav granted three days’ time to the varsity to file a counter affidavit and listed the matter for hearing on April 24. The court also granted liberty to Chugh to file his rejoinder.
During the hearing, Justice Kaurav remarked that university's order did not reflect application of mind.
"There has to be independent application of mind which is not reflected in the order... The order must reflect the reasoning," the court said.
“ You are a statutory body. You are a University...The impugned order does not show the application of the mind. It must have reflected why you are coming to the conclusion. You file your counter because you seek to rely on certain material. That material must be supplied to the petitioner,” said Justice Purushaindra Kaurav while hearing Chugh’s plea against the debarment.
In his appearance on behalf of the DU, lawyer Mohinder Rupal said that the university's decision was based on some documents that he wishes to provide.
Chugh's counsel claimed that there is considerable urgency in the situation because the deadline for turning in his PhD thesis is April 30.
Justice Kaurav responded that once the petitioner is before the court, his rights would be protected.
"Mr Mohinder Rupal seeks time to file counter affidavit. Let the same be done in three working days. Petitioner is also at liberty to file the rejoinder in two days thereafter. List on Monday," the court ordered.
The case pertains to a protest that was planned for January 27, 2023, on the DU campus during which, the BBC documentary 'India: The Modi Question' was also shown to the general audience.
Chugh claims in his plea that he was not even there during the protest since he was attending a media interaction.
"Pertinently, the petitioner was giving a live interview at the time when the documentary was being screened inside the Faculty of Arts (Main Campus). Thereafter, police detained a few students for screening the allegedly banned BBC documentary and subsequently charged them for disturbance of peace in the area. Notably, the petitioner was neither detained nor charged with any form of incitement or violence or disturbance of peace by the police," he stated.
However, the DU served him with a show-cause notice on February 16 alleging that he had disrupted law and order at the university during the screening. On March 10, a memorandum debarring him was then issued.
In his plea, Chugh claims that the university's order against him went against the principles of natural justice and that the disciplinary authorities failed to even inform him of the allegations and charges against him.
Therefore, Chugh demands that the memorandum and notice that claim Chugh was complicit in a breach of law and order be set aside. He has asked for a stay of the memorandum in the interim.