Yuva Sena protests exclusion of non-veg. food in IIT canteen

Institute cited safety concerns in operation of rooftop café

Published - February 06, 2018 12:08 am IST - Mumbai

Mumbai 05/02/2018: Shiv Sena party workers met and gave letter of memorandam to the registrar asking not to ban non-veg inside campus in Mumbai on Monday. Photo: Prashant Waydande.

Mumbai 05/02/2018: Shiv Sena party workers met and gave letter of memorandam to the registrar asking not to ban non-veg inside campus in Mumbai on Monday. Photo: Prashant Waydande.

Activists of the Yuva Sena, the youth wing of the Shiv Sena, took out a march to IIT Bombay’s Powai campus on Monday to protest against the exclusion of non-vegetarian food from the menu of the Civil Engineering Department’s rooftop canteen. The Yuva Sena activists raised slogans outside IIT-B’s main gate.

On January 20, the department issued a notice to the contractor of its cafeteria, the Civil Café, asking him to ban meat items, including eggs. A spokesperson for IIT-Bombay said that the norms were changed owing to safety concerns, especially after the fire at Kamala Mills compound on December 28, 2017, which led to the loss of 14 lives.

Mumbai 05/02/2018: Civil Cafe menu shows striking off Non Veg items from their menu in the Civil Department at IIT Bombay, in Mumbai on Monday. Photo: Prashant Waydande.

Mumbai 05/02/2018: Civil Cafe menu shows striking off Non Veg items from their menu in the Civil Department at IIT Bombay, in Mumbai on Monday. Photo: Prashant Waydande.

Sainath Durge, Yuva Sena core committee member, said, “It does not behove the status of an internationally reputed institution like the IIT to discriminate on the basis of food. They have agreed to serve non-vegetarian food now. About twelve members from our delegation were taken to registrar Dr. R. Premkumar’s office in a police van after we shouted slogans outside the campus gate. The registrar said the campus had over 20 canteens and admitted oversight on his part in this case.”

Last week, the IIT drew flak after the management of Hostel 11 on the campus asked its residents to use separate plates for eating non-vegetarian food. However, IIT public relations officer Falguni Banerjee Naha said their recent circular had been misinterpreted.

“Our circular last week just listed out new guidelines to serve only fresh cooked food for health and safety reasons. We have prohibited cooking at the canteens and asked them to refrain from staying up late since the campus is an academic area,” she stressed.

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