Posted Fri, 09/14/2012 - 12:42 by admin
By Suman Rao & Madalsa Singh 8th September
When wronged by administrative apathy, some of us complain hoarse. There are
some who preach to the whiners, exhorting them to action. And then there are
some who simply act.
Most of us know the events which transpired before the 50th convocation of IIT
Bombay which saw a flutter of top politicians visiting the campus. In
consultation with the PMO, the director ordered construction of 3 helipads. One
each for the Prime Minister, the HRD minister and the Chief Minister. Rapid
construction ensued over five days and four nights, amounting to over 25 lac
rupees. Floodlights and trees were uprooted overnight; trees which otherwise
aren’’t allowed by the forest department to be uprooted, even if to stop
panthers from jumping fences. The feverish pace of construction produced 3 large
helipads. For the ministers’ comforts, roads were paved to connect these pads to
the main road.
The sports fraternity woke up to find workers rapidly digging the Gymkhana
grounds. GS Sports and the SAC in-charge approached the Dean SA to find out
reasons for the grounds being ravaged. On the DoSA’s enquiry, the Director
informed them of his decision which was conceived in a special convocation
meeting.
With the VVIPs slated to visit soon, the Institute Functionaries harbored false
information of a mass student protest on the grounds. This agitated quite a few
feathers in the institute administration. A meeting was scheduled with the
Estate Officials, SAC In-charge, GS Sports and the GSHA, wherein the Director
promised full restoration of the SAC grounds within 15 days of convocation. The
sports community, assured by the Director, was temporarily pacified and it
rejoined the revelry of their convocated seniors.
Twenty days after Dr. Manmohan Singh folded his palms in the renewed convocation
hall to a standing ovation, the Estate Office hasn’t moved a brick. The
construction caused severe disruption to sports activities on campus. The
grounds were rendered unusable for many sports . Inter-IIT practices have been
severely disrupted. Crucial practice matches with Mumbai teams were cancelled.
Deep tyre marks on the grounds have become puddles and moats, impossible to grow
grass on for sometime. Campus residents have started using helipads as picnic
spots with their families.
Amidst this, the Chief Minister used the helipad on the 7th of September for a
visit to Renaissance. There are fears of this becoming a norm rather than an
exception made once in 50 years.
The GS Sports and other student representatives met with insufferable ambiguity
when they sought updates. The Dean and SAC In-charge weren’’t updated by the
Estate officials, who themselves gave vague non-committal replies. Replies which
never progressed beyond ““we are working on the tenders””.
A disillusioned football team decided to do the job themselves. Six-thirty in
the evening on the 5th of September, the team met on the grounds, aided with
shovels and pickaxes provided by the groundstaff. A group of around 40 worked in
the rain to reclaim their grounds brick by brick.
Soon the news spread, of a bunch of people nondescriptly restoring what was once
theirs. Posters and mails went over the campus on the 7th, exhorting people to
lend a hand. The response was heartwarming. Around 100 people turned up. Inter-IIT
regulars were spotted along with those who had never stepped into the grounds
post their 1st year NSO trials. The number of people pitching in for the labour
every evening is slowly on the rise.
The most striking feature of the episode was the solidarity on display. People
from all walks of IIT life converged on the fields. Many joined to form long
chains to act as human conveyor belts. Prof. T T Niranjan came down to the
grounds, to take pictures and mobilise support among the faculty for the cause.
Hostel G.Secs arranged for wheelbarrows to help ferry away the bricks and
gravel. Most councils could be seen wielding axes or hurling broken slabs.
There was hope that as the news spreads, the Director would take notice and get
things moving. The morning of the 8th of September indeed saw a JCB truck arrive
on the grounds to fast-track the restoration. Protests at IIT Bombay have
evolved, and how.
Vinay,
It is a Bombay matter but I figured this needs the attention of every self
respecting IITian. Your hindi quote below is apt for this situation.
When I first read this, I was very upset and disappointed with Prof. Khakhar (diro
of IITB). But then it goes beyond him. It is a pathological issue with the
policy makers in India. Do they freakin leave their common sense in their
toilets?
I think this article needs to be circulated as widely as possible. You should
also read some of the comments below the article.
The PM, Kapil Sibal and everyone invited as a guest must be ashamed of this.
Don't they have kids of their own? Would they do that to their kids?
Lets look at these characaters, right? PM was educated in Oxford no less, Sibal
in Harvard. You would think they know how sacrosanct these places are, and there
is a line you don't want to cross for your 15 minutes of fame.
I want to be somewhat sympathetic to the Diro, but common, Gymkhana grounds was
all he could find to put up a helipad? And 3 helipads at that?
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