The rally from Raj Ghat to Jantar Mantar saw marchers fervently waving the tricolour and raising slogans like 'Vande Mataram' and 'Bharat Mata Ki Jai' with some of them saying that nothing is above 'nationalism'.
"Massive rally in Delhi led by ex-Generals against incidents at JNU in Delhi. Tens of thousands joined spontaneously," BJP General Secretary Ram Madhav tweeted.
BJP National Secretary Shrikant Sharma also hit back at opposition parties over their charge that the Narendra Modi government was misusing the sedition law as he quoted official data to claim that maximum arrests under it were made in Bihar, where JD(U)-RJD-Congress alliance is in power and which has been ruled by Nitish Kumar for over 10 years.
Anti-India activities have long taken place on campuses but the BJP government will not tolerate it, he said, adding, "Those who engage in it will find themselves behind bars."
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Chomsky, who along with Nobel laureate Orhan Pamuk and 86 other academicians from renowned universities abroad, had last week condemned "the culture of authoritarian menace", said action against students were taken with "no credible evidence" of any seditious activities on campus.
"Why did you allow the police on campus when it is clear that this was not legally required?" Chomsky said in an email to the VC.
The Supreme Court has agreed to hear tomorrow a plea seeking contempt action against Kumar, former DU lecturer SAR Gilani and few others on the ground that they allegedly termed the execution of Parliament attack convict Afzal Guru as "judicial killing".
The organisers of the rally, billed as "apolitical", had
earlier denied any involvement of RSS or BJP in the rally although it was publicised and invites were sent out by office bearers of the ABVP among others.
Coming out in support of Kumar, students and teachers of several international universities, including those from University of California and Yale, are narrating his "seditious" speech in English and uploading their videos online.
"I am not going to judge recent actions by the schools, by the students or by the government, but you know I watch it (incidents at JNU) with concern because I care about the people there," University of Chicago's Vice-President for Global Engagement Ian Solomon told