Friday, June 12, 2026
ADVT 
India

Kanhaiya Kumar Predicts 'Social Revolution' In India

IANS, 24 Apr, 2016 02:44 PM
    JNU student leader Kanhaiya Kumar on Sunday predicted a "social revolution" in the country when hunger and deprivation will unite the masses irrespective of their caste, creed or religion.
     
    Targeting Prime Minister Narendra Modi for the second consecutive day during his two-day visit to Maharashtra, Kanhaiya Kumar said the Bharatiya Janata Party was attempting to divide the country along caste-communal lines without solving the core issues.
     
    "Hunger is common to all. Where are the promised jobs, food and water for the masses? This hunger will unite the people one day and they will march on the streets," Kanhaiya Kumar said at a rally in Pune.
     
    Dwelling on a wide range of issues confronting the country, the Jawaharhal Nehru University Students' Union (JNUSU) president posed questions about the Modi government "squandering" public resources for giving huge media ads, his radio programme 'Mann Ki Baat' and television publicity.
     
    "First it was their own 'Mata' (mother), then 'gaumata' (cow), and now it is 'Bharat Mata'. They want to decide what the people will eat, what festivals they will celebrate, what they can wear. Who gave you this right," he asked.
     
    "Stop giving these 'jumlas' (false promises) to the people. They want jobs or unemployment allowance, social security, and complete abolition of caste system in the country, as B.R. Ambedkar envisioned," Kanhaiya Kumar said.
     
    The student leader alleged that after making top-level changes in various central universities, the National Book Trust, Indian Council of Historical Research and other organisations, the RSS-BJP will try to change India's Constitution and convert the national tricolour into a 'saffron' flag in their attempts to bring in a single-religion rule in India.
     
     
    "However, this will not succeed. We will not allow them to succeed in their nefarious intentions. Instead of the Constitution, we will uproot 'Manuvad' from India. Ours is a struggle for our rights, for equality and a progressive caste-less society," he said.
     
    Invoking Russian revolutionary leader Vladimir Lenin, whose 146th birth anniversary was celebrated two days ago, he proclaimed that if you kill one Rohith Vemula, many more will take birth since this was a struggle between 'right and wrong', the classes and the masses and deprived sections of society.
     
    Dalit research scholar Rohith Vemula had committed suicide in the University of Hyderabad after alleging caste discrimination in the institution.
     
    Kanhaiya Kumar criticised the manner in which the educational budget in the country was drastically slashed and said academics would soon be available only to those who can afford it, the rest will be forced to remain "angutha chhap" (illiterate).
     
    "Instead of formulating policies which can benefit the masses, the present leadership is busy changing names of various institutIons or individuals heading them. Is this the reason they were elected and sent to parliament?" he asked.
     
    Kanhaiya Kumar -- who claimed that an attempt was made on his life aboard a Jet Airways flight on Sunday morning -- addressed a huge gathering of Leftists, youths and Dalits, besides several prominent personalities at a packed Bal Gandharva Hall, which was guarded like a fortress.
     
    Among those who attended the event were actor Amol Palekar, Sandhya Gokhale, Prakash Ambedkar, Smita Govind Pansare, Mukta Manohar, Kiran Moghe, Bhalchandra Kango, Jitendra Awhad and teeming crowds of several thousands more outside the hall and on the adjacent roads.

    MORE India ARTICLES

    Indian Army finds tunnel near Pakistan border

    Indian Army finds tunnel near Pakistan border
    Indian troops have discovered an incomplete underground tunnel leading from Pakistan into Jammu and Kashmir, the defence ministry said Saturday...

    Indian Army finds tunnel near Pakistan border

    Two killed in Pakistan firing in Jammu and Kashmir

    Two killed in Pakistan firing in Jammu and Kashmir
    Two people were killed and seven others injured early Saturday in heavy firing by the Pakistan Rangers on the Border Security Force posts near the...

    Two killed in Pakistan firing in Jammu and Kashmir

    3D-printed technology to make drug delivery better

    3D-printed technology to make drug delivery better
    The US researchers have developed an innovative method for using affordable, consumer-grade 3D printers and materials to fabricate custom medical implants that can contain antibacterial and chemotherapeutic compounds for targeted drug delivery.

    3D-printed technology to make drug delivery better

    Fearing firing, residents leave border villages in Jammu

    Fearing firing from Pakistani forces, around 2,000 villagers belonging Friday left three villages close to the international border in Jammu district to move to safer places, police said.

    Fearing firing, residents leave border villages in Jammu

    Jaitley clarifies his remark on rape

    Jaitley clarifies his remark on rape
    Union Finance Minister Arun Jaitley was Friday embroiled in controversy over his remark that the Dec 16 Delhi gangrape was a "small incident", with the Congress describing his comments as "idiotic" and "horrendous". He clarified that his remark had been "misconstrued".

    Jaitley clarifies his remark on rape

    Looking forward to working with Modi government: Singapore PM

    Looking forward to working with Modi government: Singapore PM
    Singapore Prime Minister Lee Hsien Loong Friday said his country hopes to work with India in areas of infrastructure and education, and expressed his desire to meet his Indian counterpart Narendra Modi who "came in with a thumping mandate", a media report said.

    Looking forward to working with Modi government: Singapore PM