A Delhi University official said the resignation has not been accepted yet.
Two months before her tenure was supposed to end, head of Delhi University’s Faculty of Law Ved Kumari resigned from the post, citing “non-cooperation of the varsity authorities”. Ms. Kumari had joined as Dean and Head, Faculty of Law from September 2, 2016, and her tenure was supposed to end this year on September 1. She said there had been “failure” in ensuring that justice was done to hardworking students who attend classes regularly.
“Now students with as low as 31 percent attendance are not only being permitted to take an exam but are also being given marks for attendance by giving them additional attendance for tutorials at institutional-level without even holding the tutorial classes and maintaining fake records,” she said in her resignation letter sent on June 14.
In the letter addressed to the university Vice-Chancellor, Ms. Kumari also said there was a failure to secure any action against the “whimsical, arrogant and oppressive behavior” of a faculty member despite there being complaints against her.
The professor also said neither could she get long-due promotions for teachers, nor could she invite an experienced clinical teacher from abroad for essential training of teachers in Clinical Legal Education methods of teaching.
She said there was also a failure to secure any action on the recommendations of a disciplinary committee regarding a student who had physically assaulted a teacher.
Ms. Kumari said the issues were “repeatedly” brought to the notice of university authorities with the request for necessary action “through written reminders, telephonic calls, and messages, and repeated personal meetings” and she “felt embarrassed and humiliated at no action and no response”.
“Due to non-cooperation of the university authorities, I believe that as I have not succeeded in securing the standards of legal education as laid down by the Bar Council of India… I do not expect that anything will change in the remaining three months,” she said in the letter.
The Faculty of Law deserves immediate support from the university authorities to deal with all these matters, she said, adding that she had “failed to secure that support from university authorities”.
When contacted, Ms. Kumari said, “There has been no resolution to the issues for the last three years. After I put in my papers, I was told verbally that my resignation has not been accepted but I am firm about it. However, I will continue my duties as a professor.”
A university official said the resignation has not been accepted yet.