Skip to main content

Stop vicious campaign against Dr Rajshri Ranawat, revoke her suspension

Counterview Desk
A signature campaign has taken place against the suspension of Dr. Rajashri Ranawat, Assistant Professor in the Department of English at the Jay Narayan Vyas University, Jodhpur, Rajasthan. Text of the statement on which signatures have been sought:
It is extremely disturbing that Dr. Rajashri Ranawat, Assistant Professor in the Department of English at the Jay Narayan Vyas University, has been suspended by her university for having disobeyed the orders of the university.
The suspension letter does not mention which orders she has not obeyed. It can therefore be concluded that Dr. Ranwat has been punished for having invited Prof. Nivedita Menon as a speaker in an academic conference which had academics and civil society workers from different disciplinary and ideological backgrounds participating in it.
The conference was very successful with students and teachers interacting with scholars in a free atmosphere. After its conclusion, a nasty campaign was launched by some newspapers with the help of the ABVP that Prof Ranawat as organiser had provided platform to a controversial person like Prof. Menon who used the occasion to malign the image of the Indian soldiers, questioned the accession of Kashmir to India and insulted the integrity of India by inverting its map.
The report and the propaganda was based on utter lies as statements ascribed to Prof. Menon were never made by her in the seminar. 
Regretfully, the University authorities, instead of defending their employee and colleague who went all out to make this huge conference a success, caved in to the pressure of the goonda elements and went to the extent of filing criminal reports against Prof Nivedita Menon and Dr. Ranawat.
Public agitation started in and around the campus against Dr. Ranawat due to this malicious campaign by the local media and the organise dattack by the ABVP. It made her feel very unsafe as she lives alone in the campus.
It is quite inexplicable that the university authorities instituted an internal enquiry to find out the facts after having lodged police complaints against Dr. Ranawat. This act, in itself shows that the authorities had reached a conclusion even before knowing the facts.
Dr. Ranawat was in regular correspondence with the police and the internal committee. It is clear from her letters to them she was ready to present herself before the committee with all the relevant documents. Her only request was that in view of the hateful and violent campaign against her, she should be ensured security to make her movement possible.
The callous response of the committee to her legitimate request for security has shocked us. That a woman employee is denied security even in the light of the evident threat before her raises questions about the sensitivity of the university authority in this regard.
Her inability to appear before the committee in the absence of security has been taken as an act of disobedience. The hurry in which a special meeting of the highest body of the university was called only to deliberate on the report of the committee is also worrisome. That it decided to suspend Dr. Ranawat based on only the interim report is again a travesty of justice.
The harassment and torture that Dr. Ranawat is facing at the hands of her university authorities is a matter of great concern for all of us who are interested in young bright minds joining the teaching profession.
If this is the fate of a young scholar who performs her duty of exposing her students to the excellent minds in the field of scholarship then a person like her would think twice before joining a university in India.
We are utterly dismayed by the role played by the media. It published totally concocted, tendentious reports and in fact led a campaign against Dr. Ranawat and Prof. Menon. 
It is a fact that none of the newspapers had their reporters in the conference and yet they kept writing about the deliberation in the conference without citing their source. They did not even bother to verify their information with the organisers. It was a malicious media assault on Dr. Ranawat.
We are concerned that even a responsible and respected newspaper like the Rajasthan Patrika has published an extremely insensitive report carrying the photograph of Dr. Ranawat alongside those of criminals who are accused of crimes like rape and corruption and are evading law or absconding, claiming that she belongs to this category.
This vicious campaign against Dr. Rajshri Ranawat must stop immediately. The university authorities must revoke her suspension and make all efforts to make her feel secure. We also call upon our colleagues and students in the JNJU and other universities of Rajasthan and the larger academic community to speak up for Dr. Ranawat and the larger cause of academic freedom which is under severe stress in India.
---
Sponsors:
Aditya Nigam, Professor, CSDS, Delhi
Apoorvanand, Professor, University of Delhi
Sohail Hashmi, Writer and Film Maker, Delhi
Dhruv Narayan, Managing Editor, Daanish Books

Comments

TRENDING

Former civil servants raise alarm over conflict of interest in Supreme Court's forest advisory panel

By A Representative   In a strongly worded open letter to the Chief Justice of India, 60 retired senior civil servants from the Indian Administrative Service (IAS), Indian Police Service (IPS), Indian Foreign Service (IFS), and other central services have raised serious concerns over what they term a “conflict of interest” in the current composition of the Supreme Court-appointed Central Empowered Committee (CEC), tasked with advising the Court in forest and environmental matters. The signatories, all part of the Constitutional Conduct Group (CCG), expressed grave apprehension that the CEC—now comprising entirely of recently retired officials from the Ministry of Environment, Forests and Climate Change (MoEFCC)—may lack impartiality in ongoing litigation, particularly those challenging the Forest Conservation Amendment Act (FCAA), 2023.

Prof. Vidyut Joshi: Gujarat’s knowledge institutions have lost their soul, urgent reorientation needed

By A Representative   In a thought-provoking column published in Sandesh , eminent sociologist and former Vice-Chancellor Prof. Vidyut Joshi has raised urgent concerns over the erosion of intellectual autonomy and social relevance in Gujarat’s leading research and academic institutions. Building on insights from the recent paper Secret of Creating High Performing Knowledge Institutions  by development economist Prof. Tushaar Shah, Joshi paints a stark picture of institutions that have strayed far from their foundational vision.

Remembering Vasant and Rajab: The forgotten martyrs who died to protect India’s soul from communal hatred

By Hidayat Parmar  How much do we truly know about the real history of Ahmedabad, Gujarat’s royal city? July 1st marks a date that shines a light on two of its noblest sons—Vasant and Rajab—whose legacy lives on as a powerful reminder of secular unity and fearless sacrifice.

Top civil rights leader announces plan to lead delegation to Pakistan amidst post-war tensions

By A Representative   In a significant move, well-known academic and civil rights leader Sandeep Pandey has announced the plan to send a 22-member delegation to Pakistan to engage in dialogue with its government and civil society. The delegation proposed to go to Pakistan under the banner of Socialist Party (India) as a fact-finding mission to help seek solution to continuing tensions between the two countries over the fallout of the Pahalgam terror attack.

Global recognition at UNHRC: A breakthrough for communities discriminated on work and descent

By Amit Kumar, Naveen Gautam*  In a historic moment for global human rights, the 59th Session of the United Nations Human Rights Council opened with a powerful acknowledgment of Communities Discriminated on Work and Descent (CDWD)—groups affected by caste-like systems of exclusion, marginalization, and inherited inequality. This recognition was delivered by United Nations High Commissioner for Human Rights Volker Türk during his global human rights update, signaling a major shift in international discourse.

Climate action in rural India can go hand in hand with sustainable livelihoods: NGO shows the way

By Bharat Dogra  Mobilizing an adequate response to climate change is often seen as an expensive task and then there is a lot of talk about who’ll bear the burden. However in rural areas both climate mitigation and adaptation can be integrated well with the promotion of sustainable rural livelihoods and in such conditions people become very supportive towards it. In such conditions climate response can progress much more smoothly without becoming burdensome.

J&K's Mallabuchan villagers symbolically cut Off pipeline in protest against ‘water injustice’

By A Representative   In a striking act of peaceful protest, residents of Mallabuchan village in Jammu and Kashmir's Budgam district symbolically disconnected the Ahmadpora-Tangmarg water pipeline on Thursday, denouncing decades of official neglect and violation of Jal Jeevan Mission (JJM) norms.

Organic food stakeholders oppose FSSAI's proposed regulatory changes, warn against undermining small farmers, safe food movement

By A Representative   Over 130 signatories representing India’s organic farming community have submitted a strongly worded letter to the Food Safety and Standards Authority of India (FSSAI), objecting to key proposals discussed at a hybrid meeting held by the authority on May 7, 2025. The meeting, convened to review the Food Safety and Standards (Organic Foods) Regulations 2017, reportedly considered drastic amendments that stakeholders claim will harm small producers and the broader movement for agroecological food systems.

A healthier model for goat-based livelihoods in remote Madhya Pradesh villages

By Bharat Dogra  While buffaloes and cows often receive greater attention in animal husbandry-related government development schemes, goats remain vital for poorer households. Therefore, enhancing goat-based livelihoods is especially important for marginalized communities—particularly when such efforts reduce villagers' costs and lower goat mortality rates. One promising strategy involves training local villagers, especially women, to provide essential veterinary services. A welcome byproduct of this is that several women gain a respected source of income within their own villages.