Visva-Bharati submits to court documents supporting eviction notice to Amartya Sen
The Visva-Bharati University claims Nobel laureate Amartya Sen was illegally occupying 5,500 square feet of university land.
Press Trust of India | September 16, 2023 | 10:21 PM IST
SURI: The Visva-Bharati University on Saturday submitted several documents to a court in West Bengal’s Birbhum district to justify the eviction notice it has served on Nobel laureate Amartya Sen asking him to vacate 0.13 acre (5,500 square feet) of land which the university claims he is illegally occupying.
District Judge Sudeshna De (Chatterjee) on August 8 stayed the eviction notice and directed that the stay will be in force till the disposal of the main case related to the ownership of the plot in the Santiniketan campus of the central university.
Also Read | West Bengal education department notifies new State Education Policy
The court was hearing a case in which the economist challenged the eviction notice. “Today the university authorities submitted several documents in support of the eviction order. We have asked for copies of them. The court will pass the order on whether we can get those documents on September 21,” said Rahul Auddy, one of the lawyers of Sen. Visva-Bharati had sent the eviction notice to the economist on April 19, asking him to vacate 0.13 acres of the total 1.38 acres of land of his ancestral residence ‘Pratichi’ in Santiniketan by May 6.
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
]Featured News
]- Music, arts and Harry Potter: How top law colleges are using films and fiction to teach legal concepts
- Manipal Law School director: ‘Our LLM courses focus on data privacy, IT laws and other emerging areas’
- Litigation to corporate law: A first-generation lawyer's journey from burnout to breakthrough
- AI and Law: Top law schools blend artificial intelligence into curriculum, with research and global insights
- GLC Mumbai: Asia’s oldest law college struggles with falling academic standards, fund crunch
- NEET PG 2024 Counselling: DNB seats ‘withdrawn’ after being allotted; candidates may lose a year
- Free ‘GP Sir’s Law Classes’ help poor, marginalised students become judges
- 5-year LLB courses soon; want to be India’s top law school: Government Law College Ernakulam principal
- Distance education hampers state bar council entry in Telangana; LLB graduates seek SC intervention
- Not yet time for Hindi-medium LLB: Why law colleges are slow to embrace regional languages