Here are 10 developments in the story:
The former Army officers have reportedly threatened to return their JNU degrees citing" anti- national activities on university campus like celebration of Afzal Guru day". Here's is a copy of the letter that the officers have written to the varsity.
Left leaders today met Home Minister Rajnath Singh to discuss the situation on JNU campus. CPI(M) general secretary Sitaram Yechury said, "the action against JNU student on sedition charges is completely wrong and the government is trying to propagate RSS ideology".
Mr Yechury said the students named by police in a list of accused were not the ones shouting anti-India slogans and police should show the evidence, adding that the Home Minister assured the delegation of Left leaders that no innocent person will be harassed. Delhi Police Commissioner BS Bassi also met the Home Minister on the JNU stand-off. The police has submitted a status report to the Home Ministry.
The Delhi Police has written a letter to the JNU vice-chancellor asking the university to produce five students, other than Kanhaiya Kumar who is already in police custody. The letter says the students were involved in "anti-national" activities and that the university authorities should alert the police on such activities in the future, allow them to film the incidents and take action. Meanwhile, police have detained seven more students who were protesting at Indira Gandhi international center.
Eight students, who have been debarred based on the interim report of the "disciplinary" committee formed earlier this week to probe the involvement of students in the event, will be allowed to stay in their respective hostels to enable them to represent their stand for a fair investigation, according to news agency PTI . The university, however, did not identify the eight students.
Kanhaiya Kumar, the president of the JNU students' union and an activist of a Left-linked group, was arrested by police in plainclothes, charged with sedition and conspiracy, and sent to police custody for three days. Upset by the arrest and the heavy police presence on the campus, the faculty in a statement expressed concern over the "threat to democratic ethos." Policemen swarmed the JNU campus all day on Friday as they searched for more students suspected to be involved in the protest held on Tuesday to mark the death anniversary of Afzal Guru.
Anti-India slogans were allegedly raised during the event titled "The country without a post office", which featured an exhibition and a protest march. The BJP linked student body ABVP and a party lawmaker reported the event to the police.
After Kanhaiya's arrest, teachers and students protested outside the Vice Chancellor's office, demanding to know why students were being treated like "terrorists" and picked up from campus by plainclothesmen. A rival group of students belonging to the ABVP protested near the India Gate in the heart of Delhi.
"JNU has always been a university where there has been a vibrant culture. Excessive police action is uncalled for and has worsened the situation," professors said in a statement.
The university claims it cancelled permission for the Afzal Guru event, which was allegedly pitched as a cultural function. Vice-Chancellor Jagdeesh Kumar has called it an act of indiscipline.
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