"During your foreign visits you (the Prime Minister) are attracting investments and talking about Make In India. Meanwhile your party's students' wing, ABVP, is running 'Break In India' campaign at the JNU," Tharoor said here.
"Government should withdraw the case of sedition (against students' leader Kanhaiya Kumar) and sort out the JNU dispute at the earliest. The discussion in the international media on the issue is bringing bad name to the country," the former Union Minister said.
"People running our country should be large-hearted. The democratic values should be upheld," he said.
Asked about the "anti-national" slogans at JNU, he said, "Our country isn't so weak that it will be undermined by a few foolish words of kids. Autonomy of universities should remain intact," he said, adding "nobody has copyright on patriotism."
"We are all patriots," he said, and wondered why the "#shutdownJNU" was running on Twitter.