Close X
Wednesday, November 13, 2024
ADVT 
India

No Video Of Kanhaiya Kumar Shouting Anti-National Slogans: Delhi Police To HC

Darpan News Desk IANS, 29 Feb, 2016 10:48 AM
    The Delhi Police on Monday admitted on Monday before the Delhi High Court that "it has no video footage" which could show that JNU student union chief Kanhaiya Kumar, arrested on sedition charges, was shouting anti-national slogans.
     
    The high court said it would pass the order on Kanhaiya Kumar's bail plea on Wednesday.
     
    Justice Pratibha Rani reserved the order on the bail plea and asked Delhi Police about the Jawaharlal Nehru University Students Union president's active role during the protest.
     
    "Do you have video evidence that Kanhaiya was raising anti-national slogans?" asked the court at which Additional Solicitor General (ASG) Tushar Mehta, appearing for police, denied of having any video in this regard. 
     
    At this, the court pulled up Delhi Police for not showing any evidence where Kanhaiya Kumar could be seen raising anti-national slogans. It also asked why police officers who were present there did not take any action.
     
    "Event was on February 9. SHO was stationary at the JNU gate. When your three policemen were present there inside the campus in civil dress, why don't they take cognizance when anti-national slogans were raised? Why did not they video record it? Why you waited for Zee news video?" asked the court.
     
    Police said that an independent video was made by someone in JNU by an mobile phone after chief security officer was asked to oversee the event and it shows Kanhaiya Kumar's presence at the spot. 
     
     
    To this, the high court asked whether Kanhaiya Kumar was seen shouting slogans and police admitted that he was present but it has "no footage of him shouting anti-national slogans".
     
    While, the Delhi Police opposed Kanhaiya's bail plea, the Delhi government prayed the court to grant him bail, saying "no innocent should be punished" and there is not a single evidence of video/CCTV footage that he raised anti-national slogans.
     
    Kanhaiya Kumar himself maintained that he did not raise any anti-national national slogans and did not lead any protest. Kanhaiya reached the venue when he heard that two groups of stude nts were quarrelling, said senior advocate Kapil Sibal appearing for him.
     
    Kanhaiya was arrested in a sedition case on February 12 after the event held on the university campus against the execution of parliament attack convict Afzal Guru. He allegedly shouted anti-India slogans at the event.
     
    Sibal said that Kanhaiya Kumar cannot be held responsible for anti-national slogans, posters or holding of event since he did not take permission for it. Neither the poster carried his name, he added. "People who shouted anti-national students were outsiders," he said.
     
    Mehta however told the court that a joint interrogation by the Intelligence Bureau and local police shows Kanhaiya was not co-operating, giving contradictory statements and denying his role. 
     
    Police said that all eyewitnesses identified Kanhaiya, said he was leading the procession and "participating" in anti-national slogan shouting. "Its a very delicate situation. There appears to be a movement. And this is beginning of a movement. We have to see who has financed it. There were people whose faces were covered," said Mehta. 
     
     
    "If Kanhaiya is released it can have a pan-India impact. After this incidents similar slogans were raised in Jadavpur university and if he is given bail "then such incidents will get a boost," he argued.
     
    As the court asked if there were two groups at the spot, then "is there any proof that Kanhaiya was leading any group?", police said as per witnesses, Kanhaiya Kumar was there and was leading the slogan shouting, but it has no video evidence. It told th court that a JNU official recorded the protest on his mobile phone, to which the court slammed police for not sealing the phone and sending it to a forensic lab. Police said that it was sent but could not produce any documents in support of its submission.

    MORE India ARTICLES

    Amid Parliament Logjam, Congress Protest Continues

    Amid Parliament Logjam, Congress Protest Continues
    Congress president Sonia Gandhi led the protest by party MPs near Mahatma Gandhi's statue within the parliament complex on the second successive day over the suspension of party MPs by Lok Sabha Speaker Sumitra Mahajan. 

    Amid Parliament Logjam, Congress Protest Continues

    'I Came To Kill Hindus, It's Fun Doing This,': Pakistani Terrorist Captured Alive In J&k

    'I Came To Kill Hindus, It's Fun Doing This,': Pakistani Terrorist Captured Alive In J&k
    Identified later as Usman alias Qasim Khan And Mohammed Naved, the 20-something from Faislabad in Pakistan quickly sprinted to the small Chirdi village some 15 km away and took shelter in a house after flashing his AK-47 rifle.

    'I Came To Kill Hindus, It's Fun Doing This,': Pakistani Terrorist Captured Alive In J&k

    Passenger Train Derails In Madhya Pradesh, 5 Bogies Fall Into River, Many Feared Dead

    Passenger Train Derails In Madhya Pradesh, 5 Bogies Fall Into River, Many Feared Dead
    A passenger train travelling from Mumbai to Varanasi has derailed in Madhya Pradesh with "two-four of its bogies" falling into a river. Casualties are not yet known, police said.

    Passenger Train Derails In Madhya Pradesh, 5 Bogies Fall Into River, Many Feared Dead

    New Zealand's New Immigration Policies Favour Indians

    New Zealand's New Immigration Policies Favour Indians
    The Indian diaspora in New Zealand welcomed the country's fresh migration plans aimed at rejuvenating the provinces that have a "massive skills mismatch"

    New Zealand's New Immigration Policies Favour Indians

    857 Porn Websites Banned In India But Still Not Difficult To Access

    857 Porn Websites Banned In India But Still Not Difficult To Access
    With the central government banning some of the pornographic websites, experts believe that accessing the blocked stuff on the Internet, is not difficult as many free proxy and virtual private network (VPN) services make it available for the eager user.

    857 Porn Websites Banned In India But Still Not Difficult To Access

    'Why Bengalis Are Not Entrepreneurs'

    'Why Bengalis Are Not Entrepreneurs'
    The lack of inclination among Bengalis to become entrepreneurs was a result of "intellectual arrogance", said Lord Kumar Bhattacharyya, a member of Britain's House of Lords who is of Bengali-origin.

    'Why Bengalis Are Not Entrepreneurs'