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regular-article-logo Friday, 22 November 2024

Teesta Setalvad blames IISc administration for preventing her from holding meeting on its campus

The event was organised by a group called 'Break the Silence' on August 16 at the IISc campus and the CCE Lecture Hall was booked for the programme

PTI Bengaluru Published 18.08.23, 01:26 PM
Teesta Setalvad

Teesta Setalvad File picture

Human rights activist Teesta Setalvad on Friday said she was prevented from delivering a lecture at the premier Indian Institute of Science as the administration cancelled the meeting at the last minute.

According to the information available, the event was organised by a group called 'Break the Silence' on Wednesday evening at the IISc campus and the CCE Lecture Hall was booked for the programme.

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However, at the last minute, the officials denied her entry to the hall, forcing them to hold the meeting in the garden outside the IISc canteen, Setalvad said in a video statement on social media.

Over 40 professors and students joined the lecture on the IISc campus, she said.

"Yesterday, I had a very unusual experience at the prestigious Indian Institute of Science in Bengaluru. Some professors and students had invited me for a lecture at the CCE Hall on 'Communal Harmony and Justice' and I think it was a last minute decision of the administration to cancel the meeting," she said.

According to her, the IISc administration even tried to prevent her from entering the institute's gate.

However, over 40 students and professors sat in the garden outside the canteen and had an intense discussions on "justice, peace, the critical juncture where India is at and also the need for citizens today to collectively come together, speak up for rationality, dissent, communal harmony and peace." The activist said, "Communal harmony and peace cannot be a taboo word in modern-day 21st century India." The organisers of the event said she spoke on communal riots and persecution of Muslims and dissenters in India.

The IISc authorities were not available for comment on the issue.

The Supreme Court had granted Setalvad regular bail last month in a case of alleged fabrication of documents to frame innocent people in the 2002 post-Godhra riot cases.

Except for the headline, this story has not been edited by The Telegraph Online staff and has been published from a syndicated feed.

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