Supreme Court directs TISS Mumbai to reinstate dalit PhD scholar suspended for anti-NEP protest
Team Careers360 | May 2, 2025 | 05:48 PM IST | 2 mins read
Ramdas Sivanandan’ victory comes after a year-long court battle, first at the Bombay HC and then, SC. Meanwhile, TISS suspended the students’ union and banned his organisation, the PSF.
NEW DELHI: After a year’s court battle, Ramadas Prini Sivanandan, the dalit PhD scholar suspended by the Tata Institute of Social Sciences (TISS) Mumbai has secured relief from the Supreme Court. The apex court has directed that TISS Mumbai reinstate him in the department of …. Where he was pursuing a PhD in …
Sivanandan was suspended for two years in April, 2024, for participating in a protest against the union government’s National Education Policy (NEP) 2020 in Delhi. Soon after his suspension, the administration suspended the TISS Mumbai student union itself.
“On the 366th day of legal proceedings since approaching the High Court, I am officially a student again – from today – at the very institution that denied me education 380 days ago,” Sivanandan said in a social media post.
He was denied entry to TISS campuses across states. A few months after his suspension, the organisation he was part of, the Progressive Students Forum (PSF) was banned from conducting any student-led-events on TISS Mumbai campus.
Earlier in March, Bombay High Court refused to provide relief to Sivanandan who was accused of “misconduct and anti-national” activities. After that, he filed a special leave petition in the SC.
TISS Mumbai Vs students
Progressive and left-leaning student organistions Student Federation of India (SFI) had come out in support of Sivanandan after he was suspended and condemned his suspension to “stifle democratic rights of students”.
In January, 2024, Sivanandan had screened the documentary Ram Ke Naam, critical of the ideology upheld by the ruling BJP. This was another strike against his name.
Sivanandan in the statement stated, “As we learn from people's movements, the denial of education to any student was never about affecting just one individual- it was about the fundamental rights of countless students and the question of campus democracy in our higher education system.” He added that this period (during the legal battle) has been a tough fight, taking away a significant amount of time from his education and daily life. “I am glad that I could also be a small part of the resistance. My solidarity to the students of AUD , Jamia, Jadavpur and other universities.”
Follow us for the latest education news on colleges and universities, admission, courses, exams, research, education policies, study abroad and more..
To get in touch, write to us at news@careers360.com.
Next Story
]Nepal launches diplomatic initiatives to probe death of another student at Odisha's KIIT
The incident comes barely two-and-a-half months after Prakriti Lamsal, another Nepalese student of the same institute, died by suicide on February 16. According to officials, there are around 1,000 Nepalese students in KIIT.
Press Trust of India | 2 mins readFeatured News
]- SNU Chennai VC: Mechanical, civil, chemical engineering still deliver; demand for BTech cybersecurity on rise
- ‘Bureaucratic hurdle’: KCET rank list not updated after CBSE re-evaluation, affects admission, says student
- How Bihar Engineering University is powering through violence, floods, placement woes
- As tighter immigration norms rub shine off UK, US for Indian MBBS grads, Australia, Germany, Middle East gain
- Maharashtra’s new Class 6 social science textbook drops caste system, meat diet; paints rosy Vedic past
- IIIT Allahabad fines B.Techs who accept campus placement offers and then take other jobs, allege students
- Tamil Nadu: Chennai LKG fees highest in state; fee details of thousands of TN private schools public
- GMR Aero Technic’s aviation course produces professionals airlines can deploy from day one: President
- No more ‘half-baked doctors’: NMC scraps 2-year PG medical diplomas; over 3,300 seats will go to MD, MS
- MBBS interns seek uniform stipend policy as amounts vary wildly and private medical colleges underpay