DU girl, who launched viral online campaign against ABVP, now in Twitter war with Sehwag, Randeep Hooda
NEW DELHI: Gurmehar Kaur, the Delhi University student
behind a viral social media campaign against the Akhil Bharatiya Vidyarthi
Parishad (ABVP), was embroiled in a war of words with ex-cricketer Virendra
Sehwag and actor Randeep Hooda after the two bigwigs apparently mocked her
initiative.
Gurmehar, who launched the campaign
#StudentsAgainstABVP following the violence at Ramjas College, posted pictures
and videos of herself on social media, holding placards which read 'I am not afraid
of ABVP' and 'Pakistan did not kill my dad, war killed him'.
The brutal attack on innocent students by ABVP is very
disturbing and should be stopped. It was not an attack on protestors, but an
attack on every notion of democracy that is held dear in ever Indian's heart.
It is an attack on ideals, morals, freedom and rights of every person born to
this nation. The stones that you pelt hit our bodies, but fail to bruise our
ideas.
This profile picture is my way of protesting against
the tyranny of fear. If you are a student in any Indian university, in any
Indian state and you wish to protest against ABVP then take a similar selfie
and make it your profile picture. Use the hashtag #StudentsAgainstABVP and copy
paste this message along with it.
It's time for every student of India to unite! Jai
Hind! Jai Democracy!
As Gurmehar's post went viral, with students from
various universities across the country posting pictures with similar placards,
Sehwag tweeted an image of himself holding a poster saying, "I did not
score two triple centuries. My bat did."
Sehwag's tweet, which has been retweeted 20,000 times,
has earned the ire and approbation of Twitter users. While some criticized
Sehwag for comparing a cricket match to a war, others, like actor Randeep Hooda,
spoke out in his support and said Gurmehar was being used as political pawn.
What's sad is that the poor girl is being used as
political pawn and it seems you are a party to it," Hooda told a Twitter
user who had called him out for cheering Sehwag's interpretation of Gurmehar's
post.
Answering the charge, Gurmehar hit back with a fiery
tweet.
"Political pawn? I can think. I don't support
violence perpetuated on students. Is that so wrong?" she tweeted.
The literature student, who is the daughter of Kargil
martyr Captain Mandeep Singh, also had a reply for those who accused her of
capitalizing on her father's martyrdom.
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"Don't call me a martyr's daughter if that
bothers you. I never claimed anything otherwise. You can call me
Gurmehar," she tweeted
Last week, Ramjas College witnessed large-scale
violence between members of the Left-affiliated AISA and the RSS-backed ABVP.
The genesis of the clash was an invite to JNU students
Umar Khalid and Shehla Rashid to address a seminar on 'Culture of Protests'
which was withdrawn by the college authorities following opposition by the
ABVP.
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