National Law School of India University (NLSIU) Bangalore Vice-Chancellor (VC) Prof Sudhir Krishnaswamy on May 14 issued an official communication responding to the student protest and the open house held on May 13.
The communication provided responses to three of the issues raised, while committing to address all 18 recorded concerns in writing by May 20.
"These brief responses to the 3 urgent issues raised in the email should confirm that serious steps have already been taken to deliver real and comprehensive measures. We continue to respond to several other issues raised and will release these responses on a rolling basis so that all issues will be addressed by 20th May 2026," the email stated.
Students had alleged that they were threatened with disciplinary action for participating in the protest. The VC's email contests this, stating that student organisers were only asked to confirm that abusive speech during the meeting would be subject to disciplinary action and that no threat was made against protest participation itself.
Students had also alleged that the open house was cut short. The administration says the meeting "ended at the scheduled time as indicated by the meeting organiser who announced the last question," calling any contrary claim "a deliberate misrepresentation."
The administration says that it had already begun framing responses when it received a late-night email from students on May 13 demanding a reply within 24 hours. All responses are now committed by May 20.
On water supply
Students had reported days of erratic or absent water supply in the Women's Hostel, serving as the immediate trigger for the protest.
The VC's email says that "extraordinary efforts" over the preceding 48 hours have ensured round-the-clock water availability, including increased maintenance staff, more frequent inspection of storage and drinking water, replenishment of tanks and back-up measures for power cuts that disrupt pumping motors.
On bunk beds and hostel allocation
The VC says that NLSIU's residential capacity has grown from approximately 530 students in 2020 to 1,693 in 2026, keeping pace with the University's intake expansion.
Students had reported 93 bunk-bed rooms in the Women's Hostel against 18 in the Men's Hostel, calling it institutional misogyny. The administration says allocations were made based on room size and dimensions and were "driven by the goal of efficient allocation of existing resources, not the gender of hostel occupants."
Notably, however, the communication acknowledged the disproportionate gender impact of the policy. It stated that the process of hostel room allocation for 2026–27 was paused on May 13 and that the University will explore reassigning hostels and securing new student residences off campus. Students have been invited to share feedback with the Dean of Students over the next week.
On boundary wall security
The VC says that CCTV cameras have been installed along boundary wall areas, regular security patrolling is underway, a bus stop outside the campus boundary - described as a gathering point for unidentified individuals - has been removed, barbed wire has been installed with additional strands planned for identified gaps and procurement of vision-blocking sheets along the wall adjacent to Yamuna Hostel has begun.
The announcement stated that most of these measures were communicated to the Student Bar Association and Residence Life Secretaries by email on May 11, two days before the protest.
What remains unaddressed for now
The VC's announcement defers the remaining concerns to the May 20 written response. These concerned include the Amaha mental health service revocation, the washroom ratio in Yamuna hostel, sexual harassment and off-campus safety concerns at Olive accommodation and broader questions about student consultation in administrative decisions.
Background
Hundreds of students at NLSIU, India's top-ranked law school by National Institutional Ranking Framework (NIRF),staged an overnight protest beginning May 12, gathering at the basketball court over a range of hostel grievances including a days-long water crisis in the Women's Hostel, cramped bunk-bed rooms, and safety concerns.
After over four hours of demands, the VC agreed to hold an open house on the afternoon of May 13. As per the minutes of the meeting shared with Bar & Bench, when the students posed questions, the VC allegedly stated that he would not answer any of them and that he would respond in writing in the next 7-10 days.