The students began their march from Mandi House around noon. They shouted slogans against the government over handling of the row at JNU and were stopped by police near Parliament Street police station where they camped for rest of the evening.
"Sedition is a very archaic law and imposing them upon students for a campus debate is just splitting the hair too much. Academicians across the globe believe that there is no place for such laws in a democracy, this should go. We appeal the government to repeal it," JNUSU Vice President Shehla Rashid Shora said, while addressing the agitating students.
The march was joined by students and teachers from universities across Delhi including DU, Jamia and Ambedkar University.
Families of Rohith Vemula, dalit research scholar who was found hanging in Hyderabad University hostel as well as JNU student Umar Khalid who is in custody in a sedition case, were also present at the march.
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Umar's sister Kulsum Fatima narrated how she is sick of
hiding ever since the incident happened and how government "chose to target him" considering his "popularity" among JNU students.
CPI(M) politburo member Brinda Karat, said, "sedition is like a badge of honour if the charge is applicable to those who raise their voices of dissent. Our leaders have been threatened, allegations have been raised on our party being 'seditious' but we take it all with pride if that is what costs to not accept their definition of nationalism".
The agitators keenly waited for the Delhi High Court's order on Kanhaiya's bail plea.
He was today granted interim bail for six months by the Delhi High Court which said that he has to cooperate in the ongoing investigation and has to present himself before the investigators as and when required.