Indian Science Congress to be held in March in Imphal

Historic event will be hosted by Manipur University

December 28, 2017 01:14 am | Updated 01:15 am IST - NEW DELHI

Tirupati: Prime Minister Narendra Modi with Andhra Pradesh Chief Minister Chandrababu Naidu releases a souvenir during the inauguration of 104th Indian Science Congress at Sri Venkateswara University in Tirupati, Andhra Pradesh on Tuesday. PTI Photo by R Senthil Kumar(PTI1_3_2017_000174B)

Tirupati: Prime Minister Narendra Modi with Andhra Pradesh Chief Minister Chandrababu Naidu releases a souvenir during the inauguration of 104th Indian Science Congress at Sri Venkateswara University in Tirupati, Andhra Pradesh on Tuesday. PTI Photo by R Senthil Kumar(PTI1_3_2017_000174B)

The 2018 edition of the historic Indian Science Congress will be held at Manipur University, Imphal, in March.

The event was scheduled at the Osmania University (OU), Hyderabad, in the first week of January but had to be moved out due to “security problems.” This was the first time the 106-year-old ISC — the largest congregation of scientists in India — had to be postponed at the last minute.

“We’ve got confirmation from the Governor as well as the Chief Minister’s invitation to host the event at Manipur University,” Prof. Gangadhar, general secretary (Membership Affairs), Indian Science Congress Association (ISCA), told The Hindu . They would soon be writing to the Prime Minister’s Office about the dates. The congress sees several students, Nobel Laureates and scientists from India’s science academies in attendance. Fresh registrations would now be required, Mr. Gangadhar said.

Since the days of Jawaharlal Nehru, the ISC was traditionally the first public function the Prime Minister addressed in the calendar year.

Funds not spent

Student unrest has rattled the OU since December 3 last year, after the suicide of a student and this was among the key reasons that led to its withdrawal as a venue. Moreover, funds allotted by the ISCA to the OU to spruce up the campus and prepare for the event were mostly unspent, sources said.

The choice of venue is usually decided a year in advance and the massive logistical exercise involves coordinating the visit of several Nobel Laureates, heads of Indian science academies and thousands of students. “We’ll be writing to the Laureates again and I hope they can come,” Mr. Gangadhar said.

In recent years, the Science Congress has also got flak for being a forum that promoted pseudo science, such as in 2014, when a session on mythology and Vedic-era airplanes was a highlight.

India-born Chemistry Laureate Venkatraman Ramakrishnan had castigated the congress as a “circus.”

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