In video clips, JNU students’ protest march to Parliament: Delhi police accused of assaulting protesters

Not content with stopping the march, Delhi Police on Monday dispersed JNU students and detained some of them. Policemen in plainclothes, students alleged, had also assaulted several protesters

In video clips, JNU students’ protest march to Parliament: Delhi police accused of assaulting protesters
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NH Web Desk

Thousands of JNU students, carrying placards and chanting slogans, marched towards Parliament on Monday, demanding a total rollback of the fees hike, but were stopped by the police around half a kilometre from the campus in south Delhi. Some of the students were apparently beaten up brutally.

“CRPF and police in plainclothes have brutally assaulted JNU students, arrested them. One student bleeding from ear, a disabled student injured, he told me. War on students going to Parliament coz they want to study,” said N Sai Balaji, AISA national president and former JNUSU President.

Hundreds of police personnel stopped the students on the Baba Ganganath Marg, around 600 metres from the main gate of the university and some of them were forcefully blocked from moving ahead.

Several leaders of the agitation were detained by police when they were insisting on marching on.

The varsity's students have been protesting for nearly three weeks against the draft hostel manual, which has provisions for hostel fee hike, dress code and curfew timings.


CPI(M) general secretary Sitaram Yechury on Monday condemned the police action on protesting students of the Jawaharlal Nehru University, saying it was not the right way to deal with democratic protests.

"This is Modi's emergency. The number of police personnel present at the spot of the protest is higher than what we saw during emergency," Yechury said during a press briefing here. "This is not the right way to deal with democratic protests. The Modi government is trying to provoke the students." Yechury, who was the JNU students' union president during Emergency, said peaceful demonstration was a democratic right in a democratic society. He added that beating up students shows the "use of extreme authoritarianism on the part of the government".

The CPI(M) leader said during his student days, marches were taken till the Parliament without any violence. "Here the police is provoking the students who are still showing restraint," he said.

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Published: 18 Nov 2019, 4:34 PM