The Kashmir solidarity movements of the two institutions had planned a series of symposiums and talks over the past week in an attempt to trigger debate and present all sides of the conflict.
"We are seeking to stand in solidarity with the Kashmiri people and their struggle for self-determination," their statement said.
Students, academics and representatives of the Jammu and Kashmir Liberation Front (JKLF) were present at the event.
"The Jammu and Kashmir issue is not about the valley of Kashmir but the whole state and its various inhabitants are equal stakeholders to the dispute," said Dr Vivek Kaul, a National Health Service (NHS) surgeon, invited to a seminar at King's College yesterday.
Zafar Khan of JKLF focused on the need for plebiscite and claimed that the majority of the population was in favour of an independent Kashmir.
"The plight of Kashmiri Pandits, when 350,000 of them were thrown out of their homes into ramshackle tents in Jammu, was the obvious elephant in the room that no one wanted to acknowledge," said a Kashmiri Pandit student.