Pune/Mumbai/Delhi, Oct. 28 (PTI): Unable to force the government to scrap the appointment of Gajendra Chauhan as FTII chairman, agitating students today unilaterally withdrew their 139-day-old strike, but vowed to continue protests as 10 eminent filmmakers returned their National Awards voicing solidarity with them and against growing intolerance in the country.
"We are calling off the strike as a collective decision in the best interests of the students and returning to academics with immediate effect. But our protest will continue. We will take the battle forward," FTII Students' Association representative Vikas Urs said in Pune.
As the lingering impasse at the Film and Television Institute of India ended, 10 frontline filmmakers, including Dibakar Banerjee and Anand Patwardhan, announced in Mumbai their decision to return the prestigious National Awards over government's "apathy" in addressing the students issues and the environment of intolerance.
"As filmmakers we stand with the students of FTII and are determined to not let them shoulder the entire burden of the protest," they said in a letter to President Pranab Mukherjee and Prime Minister Narendra Modi.
"We feel compelled to return the honour the state has bestowed on us. Condoling deaths without interrogating the forces that scripted those murder revealed a tacit acceptance of the ugly force distorting our country," they said.
"The rightwing attitude is exposed and we know who is running the country," he said, apparently targeting BJP's ideological mentor RSS.
"Our protest has been peaceful so far and it will continue like that. He (Chauhan) is not acceptable to us," another FSA representative Rakesh Shukla said.
Soon after the announcement, Union Minister of state for information & broadcasting Rajyavardhan Rathore welcomed the step and said the ministry would continue to engage with the students on improving the conditions at the institute.
Apart from Banerjee and Patwardhan, other filmmakers who have returned their awards are Nishtha Jain of Gulabi Gang fame, Paresh Kamdar, Kriti Nakhwa, Hunterrr director Harshvardhan Kulkarni, Hari Nair, Rakesh Sharma, Indraneel Lahiri and Lipika Singh Darai.
"I am not here out of anger, outrage. Those emotions have long been exhausted. I am here to draw attention. Returning my very first National Award, which I received for Khosla Ka Ghosla is not easy. It was my first film and for many my most loved," Banerjee told a press conference here.
"If there is intolerance of debate, of questioning and usually intolerance of a student body wanting to have a better teaching environment and that intolerance manifests in apathy, then that is what we are protesting against," he said.
Noted documentary maker Patwardhan said the government had encouraged "extreme right wings".
"I haven't seen so many incidents happen at the same time. This is a sign of what is beginning to happen and I think that is why people are responding all over the country in different ways," he said, referring to the instances of writers and artists returning their honour against "growing intolerance" in the society and "suppression of right to dissent".
"We are focusing on the FTII. This is a struggle that we are supporting from the beginning," Patwardhan said.
Replying to a question, Patwardhan said: "What do we want from this government? Not much. Just its resignation. Will that happen anytime soon? Not likely. What do we want from the people of India? Not much, just internal vigilance."