Thursday, December 25, 2025
ADVT 
India

We Fear We Might Be Attacked: Umar Khalid

Darpan News Desk IANS, 26 Mar, 2016 01:45 PM
    Out on bail after spending more than three weeks in Delhi's Tihar Jail for sedition over alleged anti-national slogans, JNU student-activist Umar Khalid has said he and his other university colleagues were wary of a pre-planned attack by right-wing Hindu groups.
     
    In an interview with IANS, Khalid, 28, said that he was under a constant "threat" even after being conditionally set free by the Delhi High Court.
     
    "The threat remains. I still feel I am deprived of my freedom. We are not free. Threat stays even now," Khalid said, seated in the Jawaharlal Nehru University (JNU) lawns where he had allegedly shouted anti-India slogans in a controversial event on Kashmir in February.
     
    "We fear that we might be attacked. And we know that it will be a highly planned attack," the PhD scholar said.
     
    And who does he think could attack him and five other JNU students, including their union leader Kanhaiya Kumar, branded anti-nationals?
     
    "The tragedy of our country at this time is that to speak of freedom is a crime. Those who are ruling us want to push us into slavery. They want to ban thought, ideas. But they can't be banned."
     
    He said it has become clear after the controversy around JNU's Kashmir event that the Rashtriya Swayamsevak Sangh (RSS) is employing a new tactic, which actually is "old wine in a new bottle".
     
    "They had earlier divided (the nation) on religious lines and it was a Hindu-Muslim binary. What has changed of late is that, the binary has been replaced with nationalist (versus) 'anti-nationals'," said Khalid, a born Muslim but who believes in Marxism.
     
     
    "Those who do not subscribe to their (RSS') ideology are 'anti-nationals'." He said he himself doesn't believe in "nationalism - an ideology always used by fascists".
     
    "World wars have been fought and genocides have happened in the name of nationalism," he said.
     
    Asked if he thought the Congress would have dealt with JNU students differently, Khalid said the previous government "did not go after educational institutes, the way the BJP is doing".
     
    "It is inherent to RSS' and BJP's functioning. They want to saffronise institutes and re-write the (country's) history," he said, adding it was the only subtle difference between the Congress and the BJP governments.
     
    In terms of economic and foreign policies, he said, both largely shared the vision. 
     
    About the Kashmir issue that raised the political brouhaha leading to his arrest, Khalid said he didn't "think it is seditious to say Kashmir is an important issue to resolve".
     
    He didn't believe that either Pakistan or the Indian government was dealing with the issue from a humanitarian point of view.
     
     
    "Both, except for political, economic and strategic interests, have not seen Kashmir from any other prism," Khalid said, adding "people of Kashmir are missing" in their approach towards Kashmir.

    MORE India ARTICLES

    Delhi Polls: AAP Mps Raise Punjab's Drugs Menace To Prevent Redux

    Delhi Polls: AAP Mps Raise Punjab's Drugs Menace To Prevent Redux
    They are just four of them but the AAP quartet in parliament is determined to make Punjab's festering problem of drugs an issue for the Delhi assembly polls with an eye on the large Punjabi population in the national capital - and to prevent the worrying problem from spilling over into Delhi.

    Delhi Polls: AAP Mps Raise Punjab's Drugs Menace To Prevent Redux

    Akali Candidate With Rs.239 Crore Is Richest In Delhi Polls

    Akali Candidate With Rs.239 Crore Is Richest In Delhi Polls
    Shiromani Akali Dal's Manjinder Singh Sirsa with assets worth Rs.239 crore is the richest among the 673 candidates in the fray for the Delhi assembly polls, a think-tank said Friday.

    Akali Candidate With Rs.239 Crore Is Richest In Delhi Polls

    Jayanthi Natarajan Quits Congress, Attacks Rahul Gandhi

    Jayanthi Natarajan Quits Congress, Attacks Rahul Gandhi
    Senior Congress leader Jayanthi Natarajan, a onetime party spokesperson who was considered quite close to former prime minister Rajiv Gandhi, Friday quit the party, sending shock waves through its political establishment. 

    Jayanthi Natarajan Quits Congress, Attacks Rahul Gandhi

    Don't Frame A Scheme If You Can't Implement It: Supreme Court Tells Government

    Don't Frame A Scheme If You Can't Implement It: Supreme Court Tells Government
    The Supreme Court Friday pulled up the central government for framing schemes and them not monitoring their implementation as it frowned at the leisurely pace at which the scheme for providing hostels facilities to SC/ST students was moving.

    Don't Frame A Scheme If You Can't Implement It: Supreme Court Tells Government

    Now No VAT Assesment For Punjab Traders With Under Rs.1 Crore Turnover

    Punjab Deputy Chief Minister Sukhbir Singh Badal Friday announced the abolition of the e-trip system for major categories besides exempting traders having a turnover less than Rs.1 crore from filing VAT (value added tax) assessment.

    Now No VAT Assesment For Punjab Traders With Under Rs.1 Crore Turnover

    RJD, JD-U Will Merge, Say Lalu And Nitish

    RJD, JD-U Will Merge, Say Lalu And Nitish
    Six "Janata Parivar" parties will certainly merge soon as there is no hurdle, former Bihar chief ministers Nitish Kumar and Lalu Prasad announced Friday.

    RJD, JD-U Will Merge, Say Lalu And Nitish