Kannur University row: HC stays appointment of wife of Pinarayi’s pvt secy

Acting on a petition from the second-ranked candidate, the court also issued notice to the state government, the Governor, and the varsity Vice Chancellor.
Priya Varghese
Priya Varghese
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After Governor Arif Mohammed Khan last week held back appointment of the wife of Chief Minister Pinarayi Vijayan's private secretary KK Ragesh as an Associate Professor of Malayalam at the Kannur university, the Kerala High Court on Monday, August 22 stayed the appointment till August 31 and issued notice to all other parties. Acting on a petition from the second-ranked candidate, the court also asked the University Grants Commission to be impleaded in the petition and notice to be served to the state government, the Governor, and the varsity Vice Chancellor.

It was in June that the Kannur University cleared the appointment of Ragesh's wife Priya Varghese, but till date, it had not issued the appointment letter. Following the media raking up this appointment as an act of favouritism, things worsened for her, when an RTI application revealed alleged irregularities.

The RTI information that surfaced last week, revealed that she got the maximum marks (32 out of 50) in the personal interview, while the second-ranked candidate Jacob Skariah scored 30, but her research score was a mere 156, while the second-ranked candidate secured 651, and Priya was ranked first based on the personal interview.

Jacob approached the high court, contending that he was sidelined and the court, after going through the procedures, stayed all further proceedings in the appointment of Priya Varghese.

It was the Governor who made the first move as he, by now, has taken up the cudgels against Kannur University Vice Chancellor Gopinath Ravindran. Meanwhile, Ravindran told the media that he is not going to make any comments on the court order.

Amidst a standoff with Kerala Governor Arif Mohammed Khan, Chief Minister Pinarayi Vijayan has announced that a Bill will be tabled in the Assembly, curtailing the Governor’s powers as Chancellor of 13 universities in the state. The 10-day Assembly session, which began on Monday, was convened specifically to float 12 Bills, after 11 ordinances lapsed earlier this month due to a delay by the Governor.

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