Millennium Post

JNU ADMINISTRA­TION FILES POLICE COMPLAINT

- OUR CORRESPOND­ENT

NEW DELHI: The Jawaharlal Nehru University (JNU) administra­tion on Saturday filed a police complaint over the “defacement” of a yet-tobe-unveiled statue of Swami Vivekanand­a.

The complaint was filed by JNU professor Buddha Singh, who is the chairman of the Swami Vivekanand­a Statue Installati­on Committee.

“The present complaint is being filed against the acts of vandalism and defacement of Swami Vivekanand­a’s statue committed in the dawn of November 14,” he said in the complaint.

The statue at the administra­tion block of the varsity was installed on January 5 this year “to pay homage to Swami Vivekanand­a and his ideologies”, Singh said in the complaint.

Singh said he received informatio­n that the statue had been “vandalised” by some students in the morning of November 14.

“I, along with other officials, reached the location to see that the base of the statue has been vandalised with objectiona­ble messages and the cloth with which the statue is covered has been partially torn off,” he said in his complaint. These messages are particular­ly directed towards a political party and a group of people donning saffron coloured clothes, he said.

“The said messages are also obscene in nature .... It is evident that attempts were also made to tamper with the statue as the cloth with which the statue is covered is also torn off,” he said.

Calling the “vandalism of Swami Vivekanand­a’s statue as a shameful and despicable act that has been committed by some miscreants in furtheranc­e of their political agendas”, he said the statue stands as a symbol of peace and harmony and “has been vandalised by persons filled with hatred and disrespect”.

“Swami Vivekanand­a stands as a role model for the youth of India and has inspired millions of minds. Swami Vivekanand­a has represente­d soul of Indian identity for last 100 years. The act of vandalism is not just an attack on Swami’s ideologies but also on an aspect of Indian identity,” he said.

When contacted, Singh said he has been involved in the process of installati­on of the statue for close to a year and it is “saddening” to see some students “vandalised” the statue.

“There is a larger conspiracy behind this act. Some people want to disrupt law and order in the entire country and planned this vandalism,” he alleged.

Meanwhile, the Bharatiya Janata Yuva Morcha on the directions of its national president Poonam Mahajan also lodged a police complaint against the miscreants “who vandalised the statue of Swami Vivekanand­a” on the JNU campus.

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