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Classes to stay suspended at Jamia on Friday: Varsity order 

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Classes to remain suspended at Jamia on Friday: Varsity order 

By PTI

NEW DELHI: Jamia Millia Islamia has suspended courses on Friday on the request of scholars and school members, the varsity stated in a press release right here on Thursday.

In an workplace memo, the administration stated all workplaces of the college, together with the departments, centres and faculties, will perform as normal.

“The Vice Chancellor, JMI, on the request of faculty members and students, has approved that all classes in the university, including university schools, shall remain suspended on Friday, January 27. However, all offices of the university, including Departments, Centres and Schools, will function as usual,” the memo learn.

“Similarly, the scheduled meetings of Selection Committees and other programmes, including Examinations, if any, will also be held as per notified schedule,” it added.

The college celebrated the 74th Republic Day on Thursday with unfurling of the nationwide flag by Vice Chancellor Najma Akhtar on the forecourt of Dr M A Ansari Auditorium.

Akhtar, in her tackle, elaborated on the latest achievements of Jamia such because it figuring among the many prime three universities in NIRF, the A++ grade awarded by NAAC, and the best rating for the college’s excellent efficiency in offering high quality schooling, instructing and analysis.

“We are making honest endeavours to grow to be a world-class teaching-cum-research college by bringing in greatest nationwide and worldwide practices by means of the event of collaborative partnerships with establishments of excellence, each domestically and internationally.

“We are committed to offering cutting edge learning experience, internationally benchmarked education, intellectual freedom and critical research opportunities in frontier areas of contemporary concern,” she stated.

A protest was held within the campus on Wednesday in opposition to the detention of 4 Students’ Federation of India (SFI) activists hours earlier than the proposed screening of the controversial BBC documentary “India: The Modi Question”.

NEW DELHI: Jamia Millia Islamia has suspended courses on Friday on the request of scholars and school members, the varsity stated in a press release right here on Thursday.

In an workplace memo, the administration stated all workplaces of the college, together with the departments, centres and faculties, will perform as normal.

“The Vice Chancellor, JMI, on the request of faculty members and students, has approved that all classes in the university, including university schools, shall remain suspended on Friday, January 27. However, all offices of the university, including Departments, Centres and Schools, will function as usual,” the memo learn.

“Similarly, the scheduled meetings of Selection Committees and other programmes, including Examinations, if any, will also be held as per notified schedule,” it added.

The college celebrated the 74th Republic Day on Thursday with unfurling of the nationwide flag by Vice Chancellor Najma Akhtar on the forecourt of Dr M A Ansari Auditorium.

Akhtar, in her tackle, elaborated on the latest achievements of Jamia such because it figuring among the many prime three universities in NIRF, the A++ grade awarded by NAAC, and the best rating for the college’s excellent efficiency in offering high quality schooling, instructing and analysis.

“We are making honest endeavours to grow to be a world-class teaching-cum-research college by bringing in greatest nationwide and worldwide practices by means of the event of collaborative partnerships with establishments of excellence, each domestically and internationally.

“We are committed to offering cutting edge learning experience, internationally benchmarked education, intellectual freedom and critical research opportunities in frontier areas of contemporary concern,” she stated.

A protest was held within the campus on Wednesday in opposition to the detention of 4 Students’ Federation of India (SFI) activists hours earlier than the proposed screening of the controversial BBC documentary “India: The Modi Question”.