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Jnu Bent Rules To Give Hostel Rooms To Umar Khalid, D. Raja’S Daughter


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Students seeking hostel rooms have been divided into three priorities, P-1, P-2 and P-3. According to the manual, first priority (P-1) is given to students who are enrolled for “full-time programmes and who have passed their qualifying examination from places outside Delhi and are not residents of Delhi. The second priority (P-2) is given to those outstation students who are enrolled for a programme at a level at which the student already has a degree or has pursued studies in JNU (at the same level) with hostel accommodation, and the third (P-3) is for students of V and XI Semester M.A., V Semester M.Phil, IX Semester Ph.D., local students in that order.”
The third category comes into play only when students in the first two categories have been allotted rooms. There are about 5,500 hostel rooms in JNU and many of JNU’s present students come from outside of Delhi and are entitled to hostel rooms. For the lack of accommodation, they stay in PGs and dormitories outside.
Similar to Umar Khalid, Aparajita Raja, who too is pursuing a PhD, has been staying on campus, in room number 261 of the Koyna hostel. Her father, D. Raja, has been a Rajya Sabha member from the Communist Party of India (CPI) since July 2007. D. Raja was re-elected to the Upper House in July 2013. Raja occupies a government accommodation on posh Rafi Marg in Lutyens’ Delhi. It was allotted to him when he became a Rajya Sabha member.
Both Umar Khalid and Aparajita Raja, as per the rules laid down by the hostel manual, are P-3 students. JNU has been facing a shortage of hostel rooms for a long time because of which in January last year, students of the university had gone on an indefinite hunger strike demanding the expansion of hostel-capacity. The shortage of hostel rooms for those who really need these has always been an emotive issue in university elections. The hostel rent for students staying on campus is Rs 240 a year for a room with one bed and Rs 120 a year for a room with two beds. Conversely, the rent of a one-room accommodation in the nearby Katwaria Sarai, Munirka and Bersarai, where most JNU students who do not get hostel accommodation stay, is around Rs 6,000 per month.
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Their intention is never to study, but to do politics and disturb the students who are keen in studies. Why tax payer pay for their politics. These kinds of activities should never be entertained on the campus and no rules should be bent. The hostel allocation must be transparent and audited on yearly basis.

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Their intention is never to study, but to do politics and disturb the students who are keen in studies. Why tax payer pay for their politics. These kinds of activities should never be entertained on the campus and no rules should be bent. The hostel allocation must be transparent and audited on yearly basis.

no intention to study anedi i dont think baa nduku ante PhD lo enrollment is not that easy kada.,. but yes sure shot they are more interested in politics 

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no intention to study anedi i dont think baa nduku ante PhD lo enrollment is not that easy kada.,. but yes sure shot they are more interested in politics 

 

political push vunte dentlo ayina vasthundi

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Not everyone with a muslim sounding name is a wannabe jihadi. If you have the patience, read through this chance interview with Umar Khalid some 6yrs ago.

 

http://indianexpress.com/article/india/india-news-india/jnu-row-my-name-is-umar-khalid-and-i-am-a-delhi-university-student/

 

I wanted to meet him to understand his reasons. We spoke for hours in their house, before Umar walked in and joined the discussion. Five minutes later, I knew it, this was the guy. He fit the idea of the student we had in our mind. Umar, the Banyan Tree school pass-out, who hung around in kurtas and faded jeans, raised his eyebrows when I first suggested he speak as a Muslim. “Why me?” He was uncomfortable about how his neighbourhood and his Muslim identity were being profiled. But he refused to use “a strong word” like Islamophobia. “Let’s just talk about the issues and not dramatise,” he said. “I am hardly victimised. I am hardly a Muslim. You should speak to students from Jamia, many of them are having real problems in the hostel,” Umar said. 

 

 

 

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Not everyone with a muslim sounding name is a wannabe jihadi. If you have the patience, read through this chance interview with Umar Khalid some 6yrs ago.

http://indianexpress.com/article/india/india-news-india/jnu-row-my-name-is-umar-khalid-and-i-am-a-delhi-university-student/

I wanted to meet him to understand his reasons. We spoke for hours in their house, before Umar walked in and joined the discussion. Five minutes later, I knew it, this was the guy. He fit the idea of the student we had in our mind. Umar, the Banyan Tree school pass-out, who hung around in kurtas and faded jeans, raised his eyebrows when I first suggested he speak as a Muslim. “Why me?” He was uncomfortable about how his neighbourhood and his Muslim identity were being profiled. But he refused to use “a strong word” like Islamophobia. “Let’s just talk about the issues and not dramatise,” he said. “I am hardly victimised. I am hardly a Muslim. You should speak to students from Jamia, many of them are having real problems in the hostel,” Umar said.


Actually here am taking about how 3 times rajayasabha MP daughter misusing university facilities where there are so many p1 students doesn't have rooms
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