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Days After PB Mehta’s Resignation, Arvind Subramanian Also Quits Ashoka University

Former Chief Economic Adviser, Dr. Arvind Subramanian. (File Photo: IANS)

Clarion India

NEW DELHI – In a span of two days, two of India’s leading scholars, Pratap Bhanu Mehta and Arvind Subramanian, have tendered their resignations from Ashoka University.

Noted scholar and political scientist Pratap Bhanu Mehta resigned as professor from Ashoka University on Tuesday, less than two years after he stepped down from the post of Vice-Chancellor.

Mehta is a staunch critic of the current government, and constantly questions its actions in his public appearances and through his writings.

The details of Mehta’s resignation are still unknown, with him offering no comments when asked if it had anything to do with his criticism of the current government.

However, a day after, economist Arvind Subramanian also resigned as a professor in the Department of Economics, citing the circumstances behind Mehta’s resignation as his reason.

Subramanian is the former Chief Economic Adviser to the Prime Minister of India. He had joined Ashoka University in July last year and is the founding director of the Ashoka Centre for Economic Policy.

Referring to Mehta’s resignation in his resignation letter to the Vice-Chancellor, Malabika Sarkar, he wrote “…But that someone of such integrity and eminence, who embodied the vision underlying Ashoka, felt compelled to leave is troubling. That even Ashoka—with its private status and backing by private capital—can no longer provide a space for academic expression and freedom is ominously disturbing.”

“Above all, that the University’s commitment to fight for and sustain the Ashoka vision is now open to question makes it difficult for me to continue being part of Ashoka,” he further wrote.

Many opine that it is a part of a worrying trend of organizations discouraging dissent to prevent backlash from the ruling dispensation. Some even suggest that this is but a part of the government’s ongoing clampdown on academics and intellectualism.

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