Can Not Show PM Modi's Degree To Strangers: DU To Delhi High Court

In 2016, the then Delhi Chief Minister Arvind Kejriwal asked PM Modi to “come clean about his educational degrees”.

Delhi University Edited by
Can Not Show PM Modi's Degree To Strangers: DU To Delhi High Court

Can Not Show PM Modi's Degree To Strangers: DU To Delhi High Court

Delhi University (DU) on Thursday said that it has no reservations in showing the degree of Prime Minister (PM) Narendra Modi to the Delhi High Court, but will not expose it to the scrutiny of strangers.

The submission was made by Solicitor General (SG) Tushar Mehta before Justice Sachin Datta during the hearing of DU’s plea challenging the 2017 Central Information Commission (CIC) order directing the varsity to furnish information related to Modi’s degree to a Right to Information (RTI) applicant.

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“The degree of one student is demanded, who is the PM of the county. We have nothing to hide. We have year-wise register where everything is mentioned. DU has no objection in showing the original degree for BA in 1978 to Court…DU has no reservation in showing but I will not expose university records to the scrutiny of strangers who are here either for publicity or for some oblique political motive,” Mehta submitted.

In 2016, the then Delhi Chief Minister Arvind Kejriwal asked PM Modi to “come clean about his educational degrees” and “make them public”. Modi had sworn in his election affidavit that he graduated from DU in the B.A. Political Science course in the year 1978.

Subsequently, Aam Aadmi Party supporter Neeraj Sharma filed an RTI seeking details of PM Modi’s degree from Delhi University. The University denied disclosure of the information related to the degree, stating that it was “private” and had “nothing to do with public interest”.

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In December 2016, Sharma moved the CIC against the University’s response. Information Commissioner Prof M Acharyulu passed an order directing DU to make the register containing the list of students who passed the Bachelor of Arts programme in 1978, public.

On January 23, 2017, the University moved High Court challenging the CIC order. The Court had in January 2017 issued notice to Sharma and stayed the order after noting SG Tushar Mehta’s arguments that the order has far-reaching adverse consequences and that all universities in the country which hold degree details of crores of students in a fiduciary capacity.