Close X
Sunday, November 17, 2024
ADVT 
Interesting

'This Is All I Can Take’: Gurmehar Kaur Gets Police Protection But Delhi University Is Calm

IANS, 01 Mar, 2017 12:48 PM
    Delhi University was calm on Wednesday, a day after thousands of students protested against the ABVP, even as student Gurmehar Kaur, facing rape and death threats, got police security at her hometown Jalandhar in Punjab.
     
    After two Akhil Bharatiya Vidyarthi Parishad (ABVP) activists were arrested here overnight for attacking two leftwing students, about 50 ABVP members demonstrated outside the Delhi Police headquarters on Wednesday.
     
    The RSS-affiliated student body demanded action against the students it said had raised "anti-national slogans" at the Jawaharlel Nehru University a year ago but have never been caught.
     
    "After creating commotion in JNU, these anti-national sloganeers have moved to Delhi University," ABVP media convenor Saket Bahuguna said.
     
    The Delhi university campus was peaceful but a large number of police personnel remained deployed outside various colleges. Guards checked the identity cards of the students.
     
     
    On Tuesday night, ABVP members Vinayak Sharma and Prashant Mishra were arrested for beating up two AISA members near the Khalsa College, several hours after a massive student protest against the ABVP in the campus.
     
    The ABVP suspended both but said they were provoked by the Left-leaning All India Students Association (AISA).
     
    "We will not tolerate violence in the DU campus. We wish to restore peace in the university," an ABVP leader told IANS.
     
    Trouble erupted in the otherwise placid Delhi University campus on February 21 when the ABVP forced the cancellation of a seminar at Ramjas College over the participation of a controversial JNU student.
     
    The next day, ABVP activists were blamed for attacking students, teachers and journalists in the campus, triggering widespread condemnation.
     
    Lady Shri Ram College student Gurmehar Kaur then launched a social media campaign against the ABVP, only to face death and rape threats. On Tuesday she left Delhi for Punjab, saying she was pulling out of the campaign.
     
     
    While her college teachers, fellow students and family have stood by her, she did not speak to the media on Wednesday at Jalandhar, where the Punjab Police deployed two women constables for her protection.
     
    At Ramjas College, a student who did not want to be named told IANS that the unprecedented violence in the campus had disturbed everyone.
     
    "The whole of last week has been disturbed. This is going to affect our studies," the B.A. Third Year student said.
     
    "The guards are not allowing anyone inside the campus before 9 a.m. They are checking all identity cards," she said.
     
    Meanwhile, cricketer Gautam Gambhir voiced support for Kaur, saying mocking or ganging up against the 20-year-old for her views on the horrors of war was despicable.
     
    "We live in a free country where everyone is entitled to their opinion," he said in a video message. "If a daughter who lost her father puts up posts about the horrors of war, she has all the right."
     
     
    Former cricketer Virender Sehwag clarified that his response to Kaur on the social media was an attempt to be facetious. He said he did not mean to bully her.
     
    "Agreement or disagreement wasn't even a factor," he said. "She has a right to express her views and anyone who threatens her with violence or rape is the lowest form of life."
     
    But Sehwag's tweet did not prevent Haryana Health Minister Anil Vij from taking on the young student.
     
    He said Kaur was doing politics over the "martyrdom of her father" and accused her of giving Pakistan "a clean chit".
     
    On Tuesday, Delhi's Lt Governor Anil Baijal promised speedy action against those who indulged in violence in Delhi University and those who threatened Kaur.
     
     
    SIKH OUTFITS RALLY BEHIND GURMEHAR KAUR
     
    A number of Sikh organisations and some political parties in Punjab have rallied behind Gurmehar Kaur after she received rape threats for speaking out against ABVP in Delhi. Gurmehar belongs to Jalandhar and it was here that her father, Captain Mandeep Singh, was cremated after he died in 1999.
     
     
     
    Among those who spoke out were AAP Punjab leaders, Delhi Sikh Gurdwara Managing Committee (DSGMC), Dal Khalsa, Istri Jagriti Manch Punjab and Sikh Sewak Society International. AAP Punjab spokesperson Sukhpal Singh Khaira on Tuesday demanded that ABVP be banned.
     
    He also questioned Union minister Harsimrat Badal's silence when "a daughter of Punjab" was being threatened with rape by ABVP supporters.Senior Supreme Court advocate and AAP functionary H S Phoolka called up Gurmehar's mother Rajwinder Kaur to assure that they would extend all support.
     
    Khaira said targeting Gurmehar reflected the height of intolerance in the country . "How can opinions be suppressed like this?" he asked. "The way ABVP and its patrons targeted a 20-year-old martyr's daughter exposes their fascist agenda."
     
     
    On the other hand, the DSGMC jumped in to support Gurmehar. "Those threatening our own sister and daughter can't be nationalists," said the body's president Manjit Singh GK.
     
    Terming the incident as a sign of bad politics, GK said he was duty bound to stand by a girl whose father laid his life fighting for the nation.
     
    "Our Constitution gives all citizens freedom of speech and difference of opinion doesn't mean that attempts are made to muzzle voices with uncivilised threats. If Gurmehar Kaur stood for not waging a war on Pakistan, does this make her anti-Indian," GK added.
     
     
    Dal Khalsa leader H S Dhami, spokesperson Kanwar Pal Singh and Sikh Youth for Punjab (SYP) head Paramjit Singh Tanda said in a statement that power had gone to ABVP's head ever since the BJP government took over at the Centre. Dhami expressed solidarity with the student bodies which had challenged the ABVP.
     
    Stay updated on the go with Times of India News App. Click here to download it for your device.

    MORE Interesting ARTICLES

    On Trial: A Promising Start To Tinder Date Ended In Plunge To Death From Balcony

    On Trial: A Promising Start To Tinder Date Ended In Plunge To Death From Balcony
    Like so many flings in the summer of 2014, the night Gable Tostee and Warriena Wright spent together began with a flirtatious exchange on Tinder. Their brief relationship would end not with fond memories, but in a death and accusations of murder.

    On Trial: A Promising Start To Tinder Date Ended In Plunge To Death From Balcony

    Indian-Origin Man Speaks Out About Assault Post-Brexit

    Indian-Origin Man Speaks Out About Assault Post-Brexit
    An Indian-origin digital marketing consultant today said he was attacked five days after Britain voted to leave the European Union (EU) on June 23.

    Indian-Origin Man Speaks Out About Assault Post-Brexit

    2-Month-Old Australia-Born Baby To Celebrate Diwali In India, Thanks To Sushma Swaraj

    2-Month-Old Australia-Born Baby To Celebrate Diwali In India, Thanks To Sushma Swaraj
    The baby's mother Aditi Chandak, who holds an Indian passport, had appealed to Ms Swaraj to extend the baby's stay in India so that they could celebrate Diwali in New Delhi.

    2-Month-Old Australia-Born Baby To Celebrate Diwali In India, Thanks To Sushma Swaraj

    US Launches Scheme To Drive Cashless Payments In India

    US Launches Scheme To Drive Cashless Payments In India
    The US Agency for International Development (USAID) today announced the launch of a new initiative - 'Catalyst: Inclusive Cashless Payment Partnership'.

    US Launches Scheme To Drive Cashless Payments In India

    'Getting Old, Can't Hear You, Write To Me,' Obama Tells Protester

    US President Barack Obama has told a woman who protested against him at an event in Ohio to write a letter to him as he has grown old and cannot hear her.

    'Getting Old, Can't Hear You, Write To Me,' Obama Tells Protester

    Fed Mortgage Changes Inject Uncertainty Into Real Estate Market, CREA Says

    The federal government's recent changes to mortgage lending rules have injected uncertainty into the real estate market, the president of the Canadian Real Estate Association said Friday.

    Fed Mortgage Changes Inject Uncertainty Into Real Estate Market, CREA Says