The Indian Institute of Planning and Management (IIPM), whose director, Arindam Chaudhuri, was the subject of the cover story of our February 2011 issue, has filed a lawsuit against
The Caravan
, citing “grave harassment and injury”. The ar-ticle, titled “Sweet Smell of Success: How Arindam Chaudhuri Made a Fortune Off the Aspirations—and Insecurities—of India’s Middle Classes”, was written by Siddhartha Deb, a contributing editor at
The Caravan
and
an accomplished writ-er and university professor based in New York. Deb’s profile of Arindam Chaudhuri, which shows how Chaudhuri built an image for himself and how he runs his educational institution, has been critically praised for both its thorough reporting and its spirit of evenhandedness. In the weeks that followed its initial publication, in print and on
The Caravan
’s website, the extensive article was widely referenced, commented on, and shared by readers. The suit against
The Caravan
, which seeks huge damages, has been filed not in Delhi, where both the IIPM and the mag-azine’s publisher, Delhi Press, are based, but 2,200 km away in Silchar, Assam, 300 km from Guwahati, Assam’s capital. The IIPM filed the case at the Court of Civil Judge in Silchar district, through one Kishorendu Gupta, who operates Gupta Electrical Engineers in a Silchar suburb, and is the first plain-tiff. IIPM is the second plaintiff. In addition to
The Caravan
and its proprietors, the suit charges Siddhartha Deb, Penguin (the publisher of the upcom-ing book by Deb in which the article is a chapter), and Google India (which, the suit alleges, has been “publishing, distrib-uting, giving coverage, circulating, blogging the defamatory, libelous and slanderous articles”). The civil court in Silchar granted the IIPM a preliminary injunction, enjoining Delhi Press to remove the article in question from their website, ex-parte, without any pre-hear-ing notice.Kishorendu Gupta is a commissioned agent who works for the IIPM on a contractual basis. Although Gupta is called a counselor, a contract between Gupta and IIPM shows Gupta is a recruit-ment agent who has commercial interest and is paid for his service on a commission basis. IIPM’s contract with Gupta states: “for number of students enrolled between 1 to 24, the compensation would be
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75,000 per student …[and] for anyone who crosses the 25 students mark, the compensation would be
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90,000 per student…[and] for anyone who crosses the 50 student mark, the compensation would be
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1,25,000 per student” (From the agreement submitted by the plaintiffs in the court).It is learnt that the IIPM has filed similar law-suits against certain other publishers, also in Silchar, Assam, rather than in Delhi.In 2005, the IIPM filed a case against Rashmi Bansal, a blogger and editor of
Just Another Magazine
(JAM), who pub-lished an article in print and online questioning many of the claims made by the IIPM in its brochures and advertisements, which highlighted that the IIPM had not been accredited by any Indian agency such as AICTE, UGC or under other state acts. The IIPM filed a case against Bansal from Silchar, As-sam, even though she runs a small independent outfit based in Mumbai. The IIPM managed to get an ex-parte order from the court, forcing Bansal to remove the article from the website. The IIPM also filed for damages.In 2009,
Careers360
magazine, published by Maheshwar Peri, who is also the publisher of
Outlook
magazine, carried an article titled “IIPM - Best only in claims?” investigating the authenticity of many of the claims made by the IIPM in their advertisements. The magazine’s investigation revealed that the IIPM claimed that its students were eligible for MBA degrees from IMI, Belgium, but that NVAO, the accreditation organisation of Netherlands and Flanders (Belgium), did not recognise IMI. Also it reported that following a local agita-tion against the opening of a new campus in Dehradun, the state government of Uttarakhand had asked the Uttarakhand Technical University to conduct an enquiry on the activities of the IIPM, with which IIPM did not co-operate. The inves-tigations revealed that IIPM could not in any circumstances award valid MBA/BBA degrees or conduct such courses in the state of Uttarakhand. The IIPM, again, filed a case against the magazine and the publisher in Silchar, and obtained ex-parte restraint against them. The IIPM also filed a criminal case against Maheshwar Peri from Uttarakhand, which was subsequently quashed by the High Court. The cases against Rashmi Bansal and
Careers360
are both still underway at the
The Caravan
article that unravelled the reasons behind the success of Arindam Chaudhuri provokes IIPM to file a
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500-million defamation suit against the magazine