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This is an archive article published on February 4, 2025

NAAC bribery: JNU suspends prof, his tenure as Dean was cut short in 2023

On Monday, the JNU administration suspended Sijariya, who is among 10 people arrested by the CBI in an alleged bribery case tied to the NAAC.

NAAC bribery: JNU suspends prof, his tenure as Dean was cut short in 2023

ARRESTED BY the CBI in a bribery case linked to the National Assessment and Accreditation Council (NAAC), Rajeev Sijariya, a professor at Jawaharlal Nehru University’s Atal Bihari Vajpayee School of Management and Entrepreneurship (ABVSME), is no stranger to controversy.

In 2023, his two-year tenure as Dean of ABVSME was cut short after several faculty members accused him of “undemocratic decision-making” and “instigating students against faculty members”, The Indian Express has learnt.

“He never involved his school’s faculty in major decisions, which created discontent. Ultimately, he had to step down,” said a colleague at JNU, speaking on condition of anonymity.

Another professor and an official from the JNU administration confirmed this.

Sijariya was appointed as the Dean in 2023 itself. Heeraman Tiwari was eventually appointed to lead the school, set up in 2020. An order to this effect, issued on March 14, 2024, stated, “The Vice Chancellor… has appointed Prof Tiwari, Centre of Historical Studies, School of Social Sciences as Dean, ABVSME.”

Tiwari and JNU Vice-Chancellor Santishree Pandit declined to comment.

On Monday, the JNU administration suspended Sijariya, who is among 10 people arrested by the CBI in an alleged bribery case tied to the NAAC.

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According to the FIR, members of the NAAC inspection team demanded a bribe of ?1.8 crore from Koneru Lakshmaiah Education Foundation in Andhra Pradesh for a favourable inspection report. After negotiations, the team allegedly agreed to accept ?10 lakh for the committee chairman, ?3 lakh for each member, and perks such as a laptop and travel expenses for one member’s wife. It is alleged that Sijariya brokered the deal and demanded ?1.3 crore for himself, although he settled for ?28 lakh.

Sijariya was also the former president of the ABVP’s unit in Uttar Pradesh’s Meerut.

Sources at JNU told The Indian Express on Monday Sijariya was suspended after a three-member committee gave its suggestion to the V-C. The suspension order issued by Pandit stated, “Rajeev Sijariya… has prima facie been found to be involved in the corruption case related to allegations of bribery for securing a favourable A++ NAAC accreditation rating to KLEF… The undersigned in exercise of her powers… hereby places … Sijariya under suspension with immediate effect from the services of the University pending the outcome of the CBI inquiry/findings and departmental inquiry.”

Meanwhile, University Grants Commission Chairman M Jagadesh Kumar, who also heads the NAAC governing council, said, “NAAC is committed to upholding the highest standards of integrity and transparency in the accreditation process. Any allegations of wrongdoing are taken very seriously, and appropriate actions will be taken following set protocols and legal procedures. NAAC is continuously working to strengthen the processes to ensure such incidents are averted. NAAC remains dedicated to maintaining the quality and credibility of assessment and accreditation in India.”

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Sijariya joined the JNU in 2020 during the tenure of former V-C M Jagadesh Kumar. His academic qualifications include a PhD in Management with a focus on Consumer Behavior, an MBA in Marketing and Human Resource Management, and an MSc in Physics (Electronics). He has over 25 years of professional experience, including 21 years in academia and administrative leadership.

Before joining the JNU, he held positions such as Professor and Head of the Institute of Business Studies and Deputy Director at Sir Chhotu Ram Institute of Engineering and Technology, CCS University, Meerut (2016-2020). He also served as Professor and Founder Director at the HR Institute of Science and Technology in Ghaziabad (2012-2016) and Professor and Principal at the United Institute of Management, Greater Noida (2009-2011).

Twenty-four research papers across various disciplines are part of his peer-reviewed journals/books. They include A Study to Understand the Functional Working of Rashtriya Swayamsevak Sangh, featured in the Review Journal of Philosophy and Social Science, and Social Trust and Risk Perception Towards Acceptance of Fully Automated Driverless Cars (BHU Management Review, 2023).

Vidheesha Kuntamalla is a Senior Correspondent at The Indian Express, based in New Delhi. She is known for her investigative reporting on higher education policy, international student immigration, and academic freedom on university campuses. Her work consistently connects policy decisions with lived realities, foregrounding how administrative actions, political pressure, and global shifts affect students, faculty, and institutions. Professional Profile Core Beat: Vidheesha covers education in Delhi and nationally, reporting on major public institutions including the University of Delhi (DU), Jawaharlal Nehru University (JNU), Jamia Millia Islamia, the IITs, and the IIMs. She also reports extensively on private and government schools in the National Capital Region. Prior to joining The Indian Express, she worked as a freelance journalist in Telangana and Andhra Pradesh for over a year, covering politics, rural issues, women-centric issues, and social justice. Specialisation: She has developed a strong niche in reporting on the Indian student diaspora, particularly the challenges faced by Indian students and H-1B holders in the United States. Her work examines how geopolitical shifts, immigration policy changes, and campus politics impact global education mobility. She has also reported widely on: * Mental health crises and student suicides at IITs * Policy responses to campus mental health * Academic freedom and institutional clampdowns at JNU, South Asian University (SAU), and Delhi University * Curriculum and syllabus changes under the National Education Policy Her recent reporting has included deeply reported human stories on policy changes during the Trump administration and their consequences for Indian students and researchers in the US. Reporting Style Vidheesha is recognised for a human-centric approach to policy reporting, combining investigative depth with intimate storytelling. Her work often highlights the anxieties of students and faculty navigating bureaucratic uncertainty, legal precarity, and institutional pressure. She regularly works with court records, internal documents, official data, and disciplinary frameworks to expose structural challenges to academic freedom. Recent Notable Articles (Late 2024 & 2025) 1. Express Investigation Series JNU’s fault lines move from campus to court: University fights students and faculty (November 2025) An Indian Express investigation found that since 2011, JNU has appeared in over 600 cases before the Delhi High Court, filed by the administration, faculty, staff, students, and contractual workers across the tenures of three Vice-Chancellors. JNU’s legal wars with students and faculty pile up under 3 V-Cs | Rs 30-lakh fines chill campus dissent (November 2025) The report traced how steep monetary penalties — now codified in the Chief Proctor’s Office Manual — are reshaping dissent and disciplinary action on campus. 2. International Education & Immigration ‘Free for a day. Then came ICE’: Acquitted after 43 years, Indian-origin man faces deportation — to a country he has never known (October 2025) H-1B $100,000 entry fee explained: Who pays, who’s exempt, and what’s still unclear? (September 2025) Khammam to Dallas, Jhansi to Seattle — audacious journeys in pursuit of the American dream after H-1B visa fee hike (September 2025) What a proposed 15% cap on foreign admissions in the US could mean for Indian students (October 2025) Anxiety on campus after Trump says visas of pro-Palestinian protesters will be cancelled (January 2025) ‘I couldn’t believe it’: F-1 status of some Indian students restored after US reverses abrupt visa terminations (April 2025) 3. Academic Freedom & Policy Exclusive: South Asian University fires professor for ‘inciting students’ during stipend protests (September 2025) Exclusive: Ministry seeks explanation from JNU V-C for skipping Centre’s meet, views absence ‘seriously’ (July 2025) SAU rows after Noam Chomsky mentions PM Modi, Lankan scholar resigns, PhD student exits SAU A series of five stories examining shrinking academic freedom at South Asian University after global scholar Noam Chomsky referenced Prime Minister Narendra Modi during an academic interaction, triggering administrative unease and renewed debate over political speech, surveillance, and institutional autonomy on Indian campuses. 4. Mental Health on Campuses In post-pandemic years, counselling rooms at IITs are busier than ever; IIT-wise data shows why (August 2025) Campus suicides: IIT-Delhi panel flags toxic competition, caste bias, burnout (April 2025) 5. Delhi Schools These Delhi government school grads are now success stories. Here’s what worked — and what didn’t (February 2025) ‘Ma’am… may I share something?’ Growing up online and alone, why Delhi’s teens are reaching out (December 2025) ... Read More

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