Close X
Friday, November 15, 2024
ADVT 
India

Opposition Comes Together Against JNU Crackdown, Hits Out At Modi Govermment

Darpan News Desk IANS, 13 Feb, 2016 12:18 PM
    The Congress, CPI-M, CPI and JD-U on Saturday came together to participate in a protest meet against the arrest of JNUSU president Kanhaiya Kumar in a sedition case. Congress vice president Rahul Gandhi accused the Narendra Modi government of trying to crush students' voices in university campuses by ordering police crackdowns.
     
    Speaking at the protest meet held in the JNU campus here, Gandhi said: "They (government) do not understand that by crushing you (students) they are making you stronger." 
     
    He was referring to Friday's police action at the JNU campus and the arrest of the Jawaharlal Nehru University Students' Union (JNUSU) president Kanhaiya Kumar in a sedition case on Friday. 
     
    The students' union declared a strike in the university from Monday onwards.
     
    At the end of the protest, senior Congress leader and former Union minister Anand Sharma was attacked by an assailant allegedly linked to the Akhil Bharatiya Vidyarthi Parishad (ABVP). 
     
    The protest was held in a volatile atmosphere with the ABVP activists constantly shouting slogans against what they called "anti-India sloganeering" by students at a commemorative function held at the campus to mark the death of Afzal Guru who was hanged in the Parliament attack case. 
     
    Gandhi was received by the ABVP activists with black flags and cries of "go back". 
     
    Delhi Congress chief Ajay Maken, Communist Party of India-Marxist general secretary Sitaram Yechury, Communist Party of India national secretary D. Raja, senior Communist Party of India-Marxist-Leninist leader Kavita Krishnan and others also joined the protest attended by a 2,000-strong gathering of students and teachers. 
     
     
     
    Gandhi drew comparisons with the Hyderabad university controversy involving students linked to ABVP and Ambedkar Students' Association (ASA) and consequent suicide of a Dalit student activist, Rohit Vemula, following his suspension from the university.
     
    "I was in Hyderabad a few days back. A youngster there expressed himself and the government says that he is an anti-national. What did he do? Later the minister turns around and says that he was not even a Dalit," said Gandhi referring to the NDA government's reaction to the suicide of Vemula of the ASA who was suspended after an ABVP activist accused him of physically assaulting him.
     
    Earlier in the day, Yechury, who was himself a JNUSU leader, met union Home Minister Rajnath Singh and demanded the release of the JNUSU leader.
     
    "We apprised home minister that whatever is happening is worse than that happened during the Emergency. It should be proved that the 20 people, who are being targeted, are at fault," he told reporters after the meeting.
     
    "Home minister guaranteed us that action won't be carried out on any innocent person. We demanded him to release the arrested student leader... which he assured us to look into the matter," Yechuri added.
     
    A delegation comprising Yechury, Raja and Janata Dal-United secretary general K.C. Tyagi also met Delhi Chief Minister Arvind Kejriwal and requested him to launch an independent probe to establish the authenticity of the evidence provided in the JNU campus incident.
     
    Kejriwal later ordered a magisterial inquiry.
     
    Kanhaiya Kumar's parents who live in Bihar also asserted that their son was being victimised for his opposition to Hindutva politics and was not an anti-national.
     
    "My son is not anti-national. There is no question of his following an ideology of anti-nationalism. He is a nationalist like hundreds of thousands of youths of his age," said Jaishankar Singh, Kumar's paralysed father.
     
    Kumar's mother, Meena Devi, said her son is a nationalist, but not a supporter of RSS-BJP's Hindutva politics.
     
    Bharatiya Janata Party national vice-president Dinesh Sharma however hit out at the CPI-M and Congress. 
     
     
    "Both Congress and CPI-M who are supporting such anti-national elements, should drop India from their party names because they are pursuing anti-national politics. They are as guilty as the protesters," he said.
     
    Meanwhile, a group of retired servicemen of the June 1978 batch of the National Defence Academy, who are recipients of the Bachelor of Science and Bachelor of Arts degrees from JNU have written a letter to the varsity vice chancellor and said they are unhappy at the ongoing anti-national activities like celebration of Afzal Guru inside the campus.
     
    "We have told JNU vice chancellor that if such anti-national activity will continue then we are constrained to return our degrees," said Brig. Rakesh Chhibber (retd.) of the batch. 

    MORE India ARTICLES

    Sukhbir Badal Says Rahul Encouraging Khalistani Forces, Congress Hits Back

    Sukhbir Badal Says Rahul Encouraging Khalistani Forces, Congress Hits Back
    "What is the connection of Rahul Gandhi and Amarinder Singh with Sarbat Khalsa?" he asked.

    Sukhbir Badal Says Rahul Encouraging Khalistani Forces, Congress Hits Back

    Rahul Dares Modi To Jail Him; Sonia, Manmohan Attack Government

    Rahul Dares Modi To Jail Him; Sonia, Manmohan Attack Government
    Hitting out at allegations over his nationality, Congress vice president Rahul Gandhi on Thursday dared Prime Minister Narendra Modi to arrest him if he has done any wrong, and accused him of using cronies to throw "muck" at him and his family.

    Rahul Dares Modi To Jail Him; Sonia, Manmohan Attack Government

    VHP Leader Ashok Singhal, Man Behind Babri Razing, Is Dead

    VHP Leader Ashok Singhal, Man Behind Babri Razing, Is Dead
    VHP leader Ashok Singhal, who was one of the key architects of the mass campaign that led to the razing of the Babri mosque in 1992, died here on Tuesday. He was 89.

    VHP Leader Ashok Singhal, Man Behind Babri Razing, Is Dead

    Subramanian Swamy Makes Shocking Claim: Rahul Gandhi Is A British Citizen

    Subramanian Swamy Makes Shocking Claim: Rahul Gandhi Is A British Citizen
    In a letter to Prime Minister Narendra Modi, the Bhartiya Janata Party leader alleged that Gandhi was director of a company - Backops Limited - which was incorporated in 2003 in Britain and was later dissolved in 2009. 

    Subramanian Swamy Makes Shocking Claim: Rahul Gandhi Is A British Citizen

    India's Minister V.K. Singh Triggers New Row, Says Intolerance Debate Paid For

    India's Minister V.K. Singh Triggers New Row, Says Intolerance Debate Paid For
    India's Minister of State for External Affairs V.K. Singh has stirred a new controversy by suggesting that the ongoing debate on tolerance in India was a creation of "imaginative" minds of those "who are paid".

    India's Minister V.K. Singh Triggers New Row, Says Intolerance Debate Paid For

    BJP Elders May Frown, But Narendra Modi Still Has The Upper Hand

    BJP Elders May Frown, But Narendra Modi Still Has The Upper Hand
    The heightened prospects of economic cooperation with Britain are also likely to dispel some of the doom and gloom enveloping the Bharatiya Janata Party (BJP) after the Bihar debacle.

    BJP Elders May Frown, But Narendra Modi Still Has The Upper Hand