How moderate Lahore campus is fast falling prey to Talibanisation

New York, Apr.21 (ANI): The Lahore campus of the University of the Punjab, which was once known for its top grade academics and was even compared with the world’s best study centres, is fast becoming a hub for turning youngsters towards the radical Talibani bigoted form of Islam.

Recently, an environmental science professor Iftikhar Baloch was severely thrashed by members of student group, Islami Jamiat Talaba, which is virtually running a parallel administration in the campus.

The student union is supposed to be an offshoot of Pakistan’s oldest and most powerful religious party, Jamaat-e-Islami.

The aggressive decisions of the student group are not only marring the academic proceedings in the campus, which has over 30,000 students, but also transforming more and more youths into an intolerant group of people.

The student union often preys on young freshers who come from an underprivileged background, promise to address their weakness and convince them that they will bring them at par with those having access to all facilities.

“The group appeals to this weakness, helping with expenses and opening up a system of benefits: More milk in their tea. Better food. Cleaner dishes,” The New York Times said in its report.

“It’s an addiction,”said a young teacher Tayyib, while describing the thinking of the young recruits: “I’m from a remote area, and no one ever listened to me. But now I’m important.”

The activities of these student unions highlight how the Taliban and other militant groups, though small and often unpopular minorities, retain their hold over large portions of Pakistani society, the newspaper said.

Professors at the Lahore campus of the Punjab University are worried over Islami Jamiat Talaba’s activities inside the university grounds, saying there is an immediate need to put an end to the ‘hooliganism’.

“They are hooligans with a Taliban mentality and they should be banned, full stop,” said Maliha Aga, a teacher in the art department,

“That’s the only way this university will survive,” she added.

Shaista Sirajuddin, an English literature professor highlighted that the problem has persisted for long, but every government has avoided addressing the issue.

“It’s fascist. Every single government has averted its eyes,” Sirajuddin said.

However, Tayyib, said the rise of such violent groups is due to the ineffectiveness of the university administration.

“It’s our fault. We are weak. The administration is lethargic,” Tayyib said.

But there is a ray of hope, believes professor Baloch, who received more than 30 stitches on his head during the attack earlier this month.

Baloch said the attack has galvanized public opinion against the group and that it would make people turn against it.

“The wheels of justice grind slowly but surely,” he said. (ANI)

Oz govt. extends hospitality aid for Indian students

Canberra, July 3 (ANI): In a bid to make Indian students, who have been at the receiving end of several recent racial attacks, feel welcome, the Australian Government has decided to give a 50,000 dollar hospitality grant to the Darebin City Council.

On Thursday, the Council of Australian Government discussed the problems that Indian students have faced and agreed on the importance of extending Australian hospitality to young people who come here to study, The Age reports.

One of the ways recommended to achieve this goal was through supporting greater contact between students and local communities.

The money for Darebin will be used to fund social and sporting events for international students.

It will also publish a guide to help institutions with international students enhance their social interaction.

According to the Australian Government, the Darebin initiative will be used as a model for action elsewhere.

Prime Minister Kevin Rudd called on all governments, education and training providers and student unions to support greater levels of contact with local communities.

An Australian delegation will visit India next week to meet with ministers and key officials in Delhi and travel to other major cities where it will talk with state governments, parents and others, listen to concerns and provide reassurance that Australia is safe for foreign students.

The delegation will comprise of officials from the Commonwealth, NSW and Victorian governments, Victoria Police, and representatives of the higher education and vocational sectors.

An international student roundtable is also planned for September 14-15 in Canberra. (ANI)

Australia announces new international student strategy

Canberra, July 2 (ANI): Australian Prime Minister Kevin Rudd announced today said that the Council of Australian Governments (COAG) had agreed to adopt a number of additional measures to enhance the well-being and safety of international students.

The Council welcomed the range of additional initiatives to improve student safety including the recent high profile, visible police crackdown on crime around metropolitan transport hubs and heightened community engagement by police. They agreed such initiatives should be maintained.

The Council agreed to develop a comprehensive national International Student Strategy to improve international student pre and post arrival information, enhance interaction between international students and the broader Australian community, adopt measures to promote cultural understanding and tolerance, and consider the quality of education providers.

The Council underlined the importance of extending Australian hospitality to international students and agreed to support greater levels of interaction between international students and local communities.

To this end, the Prime Minister, announced AUD 50,000 dollars for the Darebin City Council, in the north of Melbourne, to engage international students within the community of Darebin through social and sporting events.

This would be used as model for further such initiatives. The Prime Minister called on all governments, education and training providers and student unions, as part of a national International Student Strategy, to support greater levels of interaction between international students and local communities.

The Prime Minister also announced that an International Student Roundtable will be held in Canberra on September 14 and 15, 2009. International students will be able to discuss directly issues affecting their study experience – such as accommodation, welfare and safety – and propose ideas for their resolution at the International Student Roundtable. These ideas will then be considered by Ministers at the inaugural Ministerial Council on Tertiary Education in November 2009.

The Council strongly supported the Australian delegation to India that will meet with key government officials in Delhi on 6 July 2009 and then travel to major Indian cities to meet with state governments and others to hear their concerns and reassure them that Australia remains a safe destination for Indian students.

Together these announcements demonstrate the resolute commitment of all levels of Australia Government to improve the experience of international students in Australia so they find Australia a welcoming, safe and supportive place to study and live. (ANI)

Eight students injured in southern Nepal bomb blasts

Kathmandu – At least eight people were injured Thursday when two bombs exploded outside a college in southern Nepal, police said.

The bombs went off as students gathered outside Thakur Ram College in the town of Birgunj, about 90 kilometres south of Kathmandu.

There were no immediate claims of responsibility for the blasts, police said.

“The bombs exploded just as students prepared to vote to chose their representatives in college elections,” the Birgunj police office said. “Eight students received shrapnel wounds.”

Birgunj lies in the restive southern Nepalese Terai plains, where bombings, murders and extortion have become common.

More than two dozen armed groups operate in the area, seeking greater autonomy and rights for the ethnic Madhesi community. Several attempts by the government to bring the armed rebel groups together for peace negotiations have failed.

The blast came as 250,000 students in 170 colleges affiliated with Nepal’s two universities began voting in student union elections, which are often accompanied by clashes among rival supporters.

There were reports of sporadic violence in many parts of the Himalayan nation as rival students clashed amid accusations of vote rigging. Dozens of students were injured in the clashes, police said.

Student unions in Nepal are closely affiliated with political parties, which see colleges as a base to recruit supporters.

A student union affiliated with the former Maoist rebels is contesting the polls for the first time.

In the past, student elections were largely dominated by unions close to the Nepali Congress and the moderate Communist Party of Nepal-Unified Marxist Leninist. (dpa)

Delhi University students take out streets march for social change

New Delhi, Feb. 24 (ANI): To bring social change, hundreds of students on Tuesday took out a street march to create public awareness bringing a feeling of social change among youngsters and draw government’s attention towards important issues concerning the present day youth including student fraternity.

“It’s about telling the government that we won’t hesitate from taking initiatives, making the ideas more innovative and we won’t shy away from coming to people and asking them to do work in a better way,” said Ravneet, a college student.

Non-governmental organization (NGO) representing youth and student unions took part in this rally. Leading media personalities also encouraged the students participating in the march to bring a social change.

President of ‘Leaders of Tomorrow’, which is a platform set up by students of Delhi University, said that the rally was an expression of youth power.

“The motive of this rally is very simple we want to show that the youth of today are getting awakened. This rally has provided a platform to various student unions for putting forward their demands,” Bhanu Joshi, the President of Leaders of Tomorrow of Delhi university.

‘Leaders for Tomorrow’ aims at infusing leadership skills into young minds, by organizing talks and discussions with political leaders and famous personalities. (ANI)