Millennium Post

STUDENT FRATERNITY SAYS NO TO CAMPUS VIOLENCE

LSR student Gurmehar Kaur stays away, says she’s had enough

- OUR CORRESPOND­ENT

NEW DELHI: The protest march in Delhi University against alleged ABVP violence at Ramjas College concluded on Tuesday after a day of speeches and sloganeeri­ng. From SGTB Khalsa College, it went on in the direction of the Arts Faculty. Members of the Congress-backed NSUI sat on a hunger strike outside the Arts faculty and students from various Delhi University colleges joined the protest.

“We are not here to support AISA or ABVP but have come to show our solidarity for the freedom of speech and expression,” said a student from Khalsa College who wished not to be named.

Several politician­s were part of Tuesday’s protest including Sitaram Yechury, D Raja and Yogendra Yadav. Students and teachers from JNU, Jamia Millia Islamia and Ambedkar University also attended the march. Former JNUSU president Kanhaiya Kumar and former vice-president of JNU Students’ Union, Shehla Rashid Shora, also attended the protest march.

Shouting “ABVP Go Back”, some 2,000 students marched through the sprawling Delhi University campus to denounce the Rss-affiliated body for attacking students, teachers and journalist­s.

Many held banners demanding the right to freedom of speech and condemning the ABVP for the February 21-22 violence.

On the other hand, ABVP members addressed a press conference, claiming that it was the Left that had started the violence on the day of Ramjas incident.

Towards the end of the march, despite strong attempts by the ABVP members to disrupt the protest, its efforts were thwarted by the police stationed at the Arts Faculty.

Gurmehar Kaur, a Lady Sri Ram student and daughter of a Kargil martyr, who took social media by storm after taking on ABVP in the aftermath of violence in Ramjas College, chose to withdraw her campaign following rape threats.

Hours after this developmen­t, Minister of State for Home Kiren Rijiju said she was free to say and do what she wants and should be left alone as per her wish. Rijiju also hit back at those criticisin­g him for asking who was polluting Gurmehar’s mind, saying that he stood by his tweet and was only speaking his mind. “(When I say) somebody (is polluting her mind), I mean the Leftists,” he said.

Delhi Chief Minister Arvind Kejriwal too endorsed Gurmehar’s stand against the ABVP and violence on the Campus. He also attacked the BJP and said it had now become a party of “hooligans” and “criminals”. “Threatenin­g our daughters and sisters with rape, is this the BJP’S patriotism? Shame on these people,” he tweeted. Later, he also met Lieutenant Governor Anil Baijal in this regard.

AAP leaders Atishi Marlena and legislator­s Alka Lamba and Sarita Singh met Delhi top cop Amulya Kumar Patnaik and sought action against the ABVP for the February 22 violence on the Campus. They also accused the police of failing to protect women’s rights.

A day after the Delhi Commission for Women (DCW) urged Delhi Police to probe the alleged rape threats to Gurmehar, a First Informatio­n Report (FIR) was registered by the cyber cell on Tuesday. Kaur has also been provided added protection by the police. Senior officials also said they have spoken to Gurmehar and have strengthen­ed protection around her residence and premises to ensure her safety.

Meanwhile, the NHRC on Tuesday sought a report from the Delhi Police over allegation­s that policemen attacked a female student and manhandled journalist­s during the February 22 clash of students at the Delhi University’s Ramjas College. In a notice to Police Commission­er Amulya Kumar Patnaik, the NHRC said it has taken cognizance of complaints and media reports against police and gave him four weeks to submit a detailed report.

Even as events continue to unfold at breakneck speed in Delhi University, scenes of students protesting and marching on a college campus are reminiscen­t of those that unfolded at JNU in February last year. Now, with increasing disruption­s to seminars and violent clashes between the so-called “schools of thought” becoming rampant in Indian universiti­es, one wonders whether the new ‘culture of protest’ is becoming a trend.

 ??  ??

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from India