JNU Students, Journalists Attacked in Court (Lead)

New Delhi, Feb 15 (IANS) Four journalists, including one from IANS, and some JNU students were assaulted at a court here on Monday by a section of lawyers, witnesses said.

IANS reporter Amiya Kumar Kushwaha was slapped inside a court room while some other journalists were attacked within the court premises by lawyers shouting "Bharat Mata ki Jai" slogans.

The incident took place just before the president of the Jawaharlal Nehru University Students Union (JNUSU), Kanhaiya Kumar, who has been arrested on charges of sedition, was to be brought to the court.

IANS' Kushwaha said he was slapped repeatedly by some lawyers.

"I don't know who hit me or why they hit me. I started to run from the courtroom. Fortunately, some lawyers who knew me protected me from further assault," Kushwaha told IANS.

Indian Express reporter Alok Singh told IANS that he and a group of journalists were standing outside the courtroom when some lawyers pounced on JNU students there and began thrashing them.

"As I started speaking to my chief reporter, the lawyers attacked me too. I kept telling them I was a journalist but they wouldn't listen," he said.

"They slapped me, they kicked me, they snatched my mobile and broke it. And I saw others also being attacked for no apparent reason."

Kushwaha said he was attacked inside the courtroom where he was awaiting the arrival of Kanhaiya Kumar, who was arrested for allegedly shouting anti-national slogans at a meeting on Kashmir in the JNU campus on February 9.

Kanhiaya Kumar, who is with the CPI-affiliated All India Students Federation (AISF), has denied the charge.

Among the other journalists who were attacked in the court premises were Amit Pandey of IBN7 and Azaan from DNA.

Journalists also saw O.P. Sharma, one of the three BJP legislators in the Delhi assembly, chasing and hitting a JNU student outside the court.

Earlier, scuffles broke out as the protesting lawyers shouting "Bharat Mata ki Jai" ordered the JNU students and journalists out of the courtroom as well as the court premises. No reasons were assigned.

Some JNU students said that lawyers shouting “Long Live India, Down with JNU” physically forced them out of the court premises.

The violence took place despite a large police presence in the court complex in the heart of the capital.

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