Hindustan Times ST (Mumbai)

No proof of sedition against students: Police

- HT Correspond­ent

We are yet to find primary evidence for sedition charges against the AMU students. Investigat­ions are in preliminar­y stages AAKASH KULHARI , SSP, Aligarh

ALIGARH: The Uttar Pradesh police on Thursday said they were yet to find any primary evidence against 14 Aligarh Muslim University (AMU) students booked for sedition a day earlier.

The students were booked on the complaint of an office-bearer of Bharatiya Janata Party’s youth wing after two groups clashed on campus on Tuesday following a protest over an altercatio­n with a Republic TV crew. The 14 have been accused of raising pro-pakistan slogans.

“We are yet to find primary evidence for sedition charges against the AMU students. Investigat­ions are in preliminar­y stages and we are taking note of the facts [we are] coming across,” said Aligarh’s senior police superinten­dent, Aakash Kulhari

The Aligarh Muslim University Teachers’ Associatio­n (AMUTA) condemned the “severe charges like sedition” against the students and wrote to President Ram Nath Kovind over it. It asked Kovind to take cognizance and “send a strong message that sedition charges should be invoked only after thorough inquiry and not on hearsay within a few hours of the alleged incident”.

The AMU Students Associatio­n also wrote to Kovind. “There have been repeated attacks on the AMU by right-wing forces and some sections of the media with the intention of maligning the university over false charges,’’ it said in a letter to Kovind. “Fourteen students have been falsely booked on charges of seven serious crimes including sedition. This has left the students of AMU ‘hurt’ and ‘offended’. The university has been declared an ‘institutio­n of importance’ and its students have always stood for the country. Repeatedly questionin­g our loyalty to the country is an insult not only to students but also to the Constituti­on.”

Ajay Singh, who leads another group of AMU students, asked the AMU administra­tion to act against students responsibl­e for violence on the campus. “Else we would launch an agitation.”

The AMU management said classes were held and the library was open on Thursday even as students gathered on campus to stage a protest against the sedition charges. Separately, the district administra­tion restored Internet services in the city snapped, day earlier, as a precaution to prevent violence.

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