Five JNU students, including Umar Khalid, who the police have been looking for in connection with a sedition case, Sunday night surfaced on campus, saying they did not do anything wrong but were "framed" using "doctored video".
While police rushed a team to the campus on receiving information about them, the students maintained that "they will not surrender but police can come and arrest them".
The five students Umar Khalid, Anirban Bhattacharya, Rama Naga, Ashutosh Kumar and Anant Prakash had gone missing from the campus since February 12 after JNU students union president Kanhaiya Kumar was arrested in a sedition case lodged in connection with an event held on the campus against the hanging of Parliament attack convict Afzal Guru where anti-national slogans were allegedly raised.
Also Read: Sedition-accused five JNU students return to campus; say they feared mob lynching, not police
According to Ashutosh, former president of JNU students union and a PhD scholar at varsity's School of International studies, they "have come back with a view of supporting the enquiry. The massive support we got from students and others from across the globe gave us the strength to return. I, Rama, Anirban and Anant were around but did not come in public due to atmosphere of mob lynching."
He, however, maintained that the four of them were not in touch with Umar Khalid and had spoken to him last on February 9, the day of the event.
Ashutosh said the students were in Delhi itself and that the decision to return on Sunday evening had been taken individually and not collectively.
"We didn't do anything wrong but were being framed using doctored video. We will not go anywhere now and will be part of the movement against the branding of university as anti-national," he said.
Also Read: 'My name is Umar Khalid and I am not a terrorist'
The five students also participated in a march, shouting slogans and demanding release of Kanhiaya and addressed a gathering of students at varsity's administrative block where the protests have been going on ever since the controversy erupted.
Khalid denied that he had any terrorist links, while Anirban maintained that it was the lookout notice issued by police which made him decide to come back.
"I am disturbed at the way I have been attacked and I am also angry at the comments posted against my sister on social media," Khalid said.
When contacted the university officials, maintained that they had no information about the students' presence in the varsity's premises.
JNU Vice Chancellor Jagdesh Kumar later said that the entry for police as well as media persons has been barred for now and a call in this regard will be taken Monday morning.