The Trinamool Congress, which denied its involvement in yesterday's trouble, today found itself on the backfoot with video footage aired by television channels showing a Trinamool Councillor, along with two other party activists, leading the protests outside the prestigious college.
"Those who ransacked (the university departyments)should be treated like criminals," Narayanan, also the Chancellor of the University, told reporters here.
TMC councillor Partha Basu who was in the thick of the controversy for allegedly having led the perpetrators, denied a hand in the vandalism.
"I don't know what happened as we did not go inside the university. I will resign from the councillor's post if it is found we went inside the university," he said.
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Countering him, Vice-Chancellor of the university Malabika Sarkar said "What happened yesterday was shocking. I will write (to Governor) that the attackers carried TMC flags and ransacked and vandalised various departments of the university."
"We are not going to take the incident lying down. The incident has shown that Presidency was taken as a soft target. We cannot accept this," she said.
Accusing the Trinamool, CPI-M leader Mohd Salim said from the Vice Chacellor to the students everyone was saying it was Trinamool which was behind the vandalism. He said the police remained silent spectators because they knew TMC leaders were present. "Trinamool has also not uttered a single word of condemnation so far," he said.