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JNU violence: Delhi Police identifies 37 students from WhatsApp group

Delhi police has identified 37 students from WhatsApp groups created in the lead-up to the January 5 violence at the JNU campus. As per sources, identified people do not belong to any left or right-wing organisations. Those identified are students who were in favour of the semester registration process and wanted to enroll themselves, the sources said.

India TV News Desk Edited by: India TV News Desk New Delhi Updated on: January 12, 2020 6:15 IST
JNU violence: Delhi Police says it has identified 37 students from WhatsApp group
Image Source : PTI

JNU violence: Delhi Police says it has identified 37 students from WhatsApp group

Delhi police has identified 37 students from WhatsApp groups created in the lead-up to the January 5 violence at the JNU campus. As per sources, identified people do not belong to any left or right-wing organisations. Those identified are students who were in favour of the semester registration process and wanted to enroll themselves, the sources said.

On Friday, police said the WhatsApp group 'Unity Against Left', believed to have been created while the violence escalated on the JNU campus, was under the scanner.

Addressing a press conference, the police had claimed that nine students, seven of whom are from Left leaning bodies including JNUSU president Aishe Ghosh, were identified as suspects in the violence on the varsity campus.

The others included Dolan Samanta, Priya Ranjan, Sucheta Talukdar, Bhaskar Vijay Mech, Chunchun Kumar (an alumnus of JNU) and Pankaj Mishra.

The remaining two suspects named by police are Vikas Patel and Yogendra Bharadwaj. Police sources said the two are from the RSS-affiliated Akhil Bharatiya Vidyarthi Parishad (ABVP).

The preliminary findings in the probe by a Special Investigation Team (SIT) of the police also released pictures of the nine suspects.

The police also claimed that the violence was a fallout of the online registration process and that tension was brewing in the university since January 1.

The Student Federation of India (SFI), All India Students Association (AISA), Democratic Students Federation (DSF) and All India Student Federation (AISF) had been allegedly "creating nuisance and threatening the students" against the recently started online admission for the winter semester in the varsity, the police had said.

The students' union of JNU, however, had termed the press conference as bogus.

Several students of the varsity said that they had received notices from Delhi Police seeking a meeting with them in the next few days. 

Also Read | I worked with JNU for 25 years, on-campus violence disheartening: Ex-Vice Chancellor

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