[Expressing concerns over the statement of the Chief Justice of India terming the protests as "riots", implying it as a law and order problem for the police to handle (Image for representation only)]
Washington: Terming its as a "gross violation of human rights" around 400 Indian students studying in various American universities have condemned the "brutal police violence unleashed against students" of Jamia Millia Islamia and Aligarh Muslim University last Sunday.
They have also called upon Union Home Minister Amit Shah to immediately take the necessary steps to curb police brutality or resign.
In a detailed statement bearing the names, universities of the students/alumni signatories released on Tuesday, they expressed full solidarity with students across the two Indian universities who were peacefully protesting against the recent passing of what they termed as "the unconstitutional and discriminatory" Citizenship Amendment Act (CAA).
"By every account, it appears that police and paramilitary, both at Jamia and at AMU, have used violence and pursued unlawful and reckless tactics against student protesters in violation of protections under the Constitution of India and international human rights law," the statement released through Jhalak M. Kakkar of Harvard Law School said.
They also termed the entry of police and paramilitary in university premises, indiscriminate attacks within the campuses, releasing tear gas in libraries and brutal use of force against civilians "as a blatant violation of the law and can only shock the conscience of any democratic society".
Referring to students' narratives of police rampaging through hostels, molesting women, arbitrary detentions of Jamia students at police stations, denial of access to legal representation, the statement dubbed it as "complete negation of every norm that guide the functioning of the police in a democratic society governed by the rule of law".
"Seen further in the light of the fact that most victims of this brutality were Muslims, these incidents stand out as shocking instantiations of targeted violence against a minority group," the statement added.
The Indian students/alumni also condemned violence against protesters in Assam where "five people have died, including two minor boys who were shot by the police".
"This, combined with illegal blockade of the internet in the state, has completely blocked news reports of events on the ground, and the ability of the protesters to represent their demands and report unlawful police action," the statement said.
The latest statement by the students of 19 American universities came a day after about 100 students of Harvard University wrote an open letter to the government of India terming the police action on the students of Jamia Millia Islamia and Aligarh Muslim University a "violent suppression of protestors" and voicing concerns on the new Citizenship law.
Expressing concerns over the statement of the Chief Justice of India terming the protests as "riots", implying it as a law and order problem for the police to handle, the statement said it is without recognising the violation of the rights of protesters, especially the degree of violence unleashed on them.
The statement demanded an immediate end to "violence" by the police and complete withdrawal from campuses, an immediate independent investigation into the alleged abuse of power by the Delhi Police, Uttar Pradesh Police and CRPF.
It also sought permission for student protesters to continue their protests peacefully in exercise of their fundamental rights under the Indian Constitution without force by the police or other law enforcers, urged the IPS and IAS to fulfil their duties to uphold the Constitution by resisting political demands to abuse their powers, and ensure that the police function strictly within the Constitutional, legal and ethical limits.
The students/alumni groups who have signed the statement hail from: Harvard University, Columbia University, Yale University, New York University, Stanford University, University of Michigan, University of Chicago, Brown University, Georgetown University, University of Pennsylvania, Tufts University, Johns Hopkins University, Cornell University, Massachusetts Institute of Technology, University of California, Berkeley Purdue University, Carnegie Mellon University, University of Southern California, and University of Illinois.
For all the latest News, Opinions and Views, download ummid.com App.
Select Language To Read in Urdu, Hindi, Marathi or Arabic.
In viral video, protesting Jamia students seen cleaning roads
Also Read
Delhi Police Brutality Against Jamia Students: The Ripple Effect
"Jamia Turned Jallianwala Bagh": Shocking accounts of police brutality
Over 60 groups to launch Non-Coopreration Movement against CAA, NRC
Citizenship Bill takes first toll in Tripura, protests continue in N-E India
Tripura exams postponed as protest over Citizenship Bill intensified in NE
US body on religious freedom seeks sanctions against Amit Shah over Citizenship Bill
'Tools To Divide The Society': Chorus against NRC, CAB becomes louder
"Flawed, Divisive": Leading English Daily on Amit Shah's NRC
Record number of Muslims win in UK 2019 Elections
Boris Johnson's Conservatives set to win massive majority in UK election
Muslims and December 2019 UK Elections
British Indians And The UK Elections
Jamia, JNU students protesting at Delhi Police HQ; AMU students in Aligarh
Protests against Citizenship Act intensified in Delhi, Death toll in Assam 05
Ample proof to confirm police deliberately injured students: Jamia Alumni
Modi govt moots Article 371 in place of 370 for Jammu & Kashmir
US Congress bill asking India to end Kashmir restrictions moved by Indian-American lawmaker
Harvard students slam Delhi police action in Jamia Millia Islamia, AMU
Students reenact Babri Masjid demolition as Puducherry LG, ministers watch
Jamia alumnus Shah Rukh Khan urged to break silence on Delhi police brutality
"Irreversible Damage": Bollywood reacts on police action against Jamia students
Police baton-charge Jamia students protesting against Citizenship Act
Jamiat protests against Citizenship Act in 2000 cities, towns across India
Curb on Internet in Aligarh, Saharanpur after protest over Citizenship Act