Congress leader Priyanka Gandhi Vadra on Monday said any attack on students was an attack on the soul of India after a police crackdown on students of Jamia Millia University.
'This country is for everyone, it's for all those students who were beaten up yesterday,' the Congress leader said.
Congress leader Priyanka Gandhi Vadra on Monday said any attack on students was an attack on the soul of India after a police crackdown on students of Jamia Millia University.
"This country is for everyone, it is for all those students who were beaten up yesterday. Attack on students is an attack on the soul of India," she said.
Gandhi, along with other Congress leaders, held a sit-in at Delhi's India Gate on Monday in a show of solidarity with the protesting students from Jamia Millia Islamia and several other universities across the country.
After a two-hour 'silent protest' from 4 pm to 6 pm, the Congress general secretary hit out at the Modi government over the citizenship law and alleged that the amended act was intended to "destroy' the Constitution .
"Each and every Congress worker will fight against Modi government which is turning dictatorial," said Gandhi, wondering why Prime Minister Narendra Modi is "silent" on assault on women, economy, joblessness and what happened against the students.
"The country's atmosphere is bad. Police are entering university to beat up (students). The government has tinkered with the Constitution. We will fight for the Constitution," she said.
The Congress general secretary was joined at the protest by leaders like Ahmed Patel, A K Antony, Ghulam Nabi Azad and Randeep Singh Surjewala, besides hundreds of party workers.
Congress spokesperson Surjewala said the two-hour protest, which began at 4 pm, is to express solidarity with students from Jamia Millia Islamia University and other places.
Thousands of students across India took to the streets demanding a probe into the use of teargas inside the Jamia library as well as police entering the campus without permission from university authorities on Sunday.
Jamia turned into a battlefield on Sunday as police entered the campus after a protest against the amended citizenship law near the varsity turned violent.
Earlier, Congress and several opposition political parties condemned the alleged police "brutality" against students of Jamia and demanded a judicial inquiry into it.
"How could the police enter Jamia and unleash such brutality on the students when the university authorities did not allow the police to enter it," Azad asked.
(With inputs from PTI)