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DU's Faculty of Law witnesses chaos, exam delay after students denied admit cards due to low attendance

DU's Faculty of Law witnesses chaos, exam delay after students denied admit cards due to low attendance

Indian Express27-05-2025

Tensions ran high at Delhi University's Faculty of Law on Tuesday morning after scores of students were denied admit cards for the ongoing term-end examinations due to low attendance. A protest that broke out amid the chaos delayed the day's first exam by nearly two hours.
The situation escalated late Monday night when a group of agitated students allegedly broke into the examination department. By early Tuesday, protesters locked the main examination room and allegedly broke into the Dean's office.
The entrance remained shut until the university administration intervened, broke open the lock, and allowed the examination to proceed. The examination began at 11.30 am.
According to a senior official in the Delhi University administration, around 300 students across all three law centres were not issued admit cards for failing to meet the mandatory attendance requirement. 'The administration is conducting a thorough inquiry into the matter,' the officer said. 'We are committed to ensuring complete transparency in the process of who is being detained from receiving admit cards and why.'
The controversy drew in student leaders from across political lines, with members of both the Akhil Bharatiya Vidyarthi Parishad (ABVP) and the National Students' Union of India (NSUI) among those affected.
Responding to the unrest, Professor Anju Vali Tikoo, Head and Dean of the Faculty of Law, issued a statement later in the day: 'All the students who have been detained due to shortage of attendance are being provisionally allowed to sit in the L.L.B II/IV/VI term examination, May-June 2025, subject to the outcome of the Enquiry Committee.'
This is not the first time that exams have been delayed due to low attendance. Last year, the Faculty of Law deferred its LLB exams for the second, fourth, and sixth semesters. The exams, originally scheduled from July 4 to July 26, were postponed after several students failed to meet the mandatory attendance criteria, sparking protests and demands for leniency.

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