DU Correspondent :
Jatiyatabadi Chhatra Dal (JCD), the student wing of BNP, on Thursday demanded a safe environment for all the student organisations and called upon the authorities to postpone the
Dhaka University Central Students Union (DUCSU) election for three months in this regard.
Welcoming the DUCSU election, JCD activists said a safe environment on the DU campus is needed for all the student wings of political parties for holding campaigns ahead of the polls, and demanded that the authorities postpone the polls for three months and ensure that the student bodies can hold their campaigns properly and safely during this time.
The JCD men placed their demand to the DU Vice-Chancellor Prof Md Akhtaruzzaman by handing a memorandum to him around 11:00am.
After placing their demand to the VC, the JCD activists brought out a rally on the university campus from the Vice-Chancellor’s office and reached the Teacher-Student Centre (TSC) after about nine years. They halted their political programmes on the campus after 2010 fearing arrest and harassment.
Jatiyatabadi Chhatra Dal (JCD), the student wing of BNP, on Thursday demanded a safe environment for all the student organisations and called upon the authorities to postpone the
Dhaka University Central Students Union (DUCSU) election for three months in this regard.
Welcoming the DUCSU election, JCD activists said a safe environment on the DU campus is needed for all the student wings of political parties for holding campaigns ahead of the polls, and demanded that the authorities postpone the polls for three months and ensure that the student bodies can hold their campaigns properly and safely during this time.
The JCD men placed their demand to the DU Vice-Chancellor Prof Md Akhtaruzzaman by handing a memorandum to him around 11:00am.
After placing their demand to the VC, the JCD activists brought out a rally on the university campus from the Vice-Chancellor’s office and reached the Teacher-Student Centre (TSC) after about nine years. They halted their political programmes on the campus after 2010 fearing arrest and harassment.