came forward, the larger committee set up to probe the actual incident of thrashing girls and boys playing cricket together, will be so informed on Monday,” he said.
Dr Naseem is also a member of the five-member committee set up to investigate the alleged thrashing of the participants of a mix-gender cricket match by IJT activists last week.
This committee is headed by the chairperson of psychology department, Anila Amber Malik, and comprising varsity’s student adviser Prof Dr Syed Ansar Rizvi, security advisor Dr Muhammad Zubair, Dr Shahid Naseem of geology department senior medical officer Dr Nadeem Shaikh-uz-Zaman as members. Its first meeting has been scheduled for 10am on Monday.
Student adviser Dr Ansar Rizvi told The News he had received a written complaint about the incident on behalf of the students. However, it said, the students had refrained from mentioning their identities in the application since it bore no signature.
“Hence, it could be considered as an official complaint since the students injured remain in the shadows,” he said. “However, I will still produce this letter in the meeting so other members can also give their opinion.”
What was strange, however, was the student adviser’s complete oblivion that he was part of the inquiry committee. “When I heard about it, I went to the registrar’s office and asked them about it. It was then I was handed a letter stating that my presence was required as a member of the inquiry committee,” he said.
On the evening of October 28, activists of the Islami Jamiat-e-Talaba (IJT) allegedly thrashed a group of students who had been playing cricket while waiting for their point to take them to Gulshan-e-Hadeed.
The KU administration learnt of the incident when an injured boy showed up at the university clinic where he informed the security incharge and student adviser that girls had also received injuries.
Rangers later held four IJT activists but allowed them to go home after a couple of hours on the call of university administration.
However, the IJT had rejected the claims that any girl students had been beaten up. Its information secretary Sajid Khan demanded that girls making this claim should come forward and point out the activists who had physically abused them.
The matter was taken up by students of the university and other student wings of political parties, especially the All Pakistan Muttahida Students’ Organisation which also staged a protest demonstration outside the Karachi Press Club the day after the incident.
The Imamia Students Organisation and the Punjabi Students’ Association also threw their weight behind them. The IJT had followed with its own counter press conference about the incident.
After the weekend, on Monday, November 2, girl students had organised a cricket match to declare their defiance of IJT’s high-handedness but it was called off after at least three media personnel were manhandled by the university’s security guards when one of them supposedly misbehaved with an administration official.
The media teams had been held at the office of KU vice chancellor for at least three hours before they were allowed to return. The media personnel had registered their protest with the vice chancellor Prof Dr Mohammad Qaiser upon which he had constituted another inquiry committee and directed it to submit its report within the next three days, on November 6.