J-K Students Association Slams Pakistan Over Jamia Remarks, Says 'None of Your Business'

The Jammu and Kashmir Students Association has strongly condemned Pakistan's remarks on the recent protests at Jamia Millia Islamia, calling it an unwarranted interference in India's internal affairs. National Convenor Nasir Khuehami asserted that India is fully capable of addressing its own issues through democratic and institutional mechanisms. The Association highlighted Jamia's legacy as a symbol of inclusive education and national integration, while noting that student dissent is part of a healthy democratic ecosystem. They cautioned against attempts to internationalise domestic discourse or project internal democratic processes as systemic crises.

Key Points: J-K Students Slam Pakistan Over Jamia Interference

  • JKSA condemns Pakistan's remarks on Jamia protests as interference
  • Nasir Khuehami says India's internal affairs are sovereign and non-negotiable
  • Association says dissent in universities is part of democratic ecosystem
  • Sharif Khan says India has robust constitutional safeguards and independent judiciary
  • JKSA warns against internationalising domestic discourse
3 min read

"None of their business, stop poking nose in India's internal affairs": J-K Students Association slams Pakistan over Jamia Milia remarks

J-K Students Association condemns Pakistan's remarks on Jamia protests, calling it interference in India's internal affairs. Nasir Khuehami says India can handle its own issues.

"This is none of their business. They should refrain from poking their nose into India's internal affairs. - Nasir Khuehami"

Srinagar, May 2

The Jammu and Kashmir Students Association on Friday strongly condemned the remarks made by Pakistan regarding the recent protests at Jamia Millia Islamia, asserting that India's internal affairs are sovereign, non-negotiable, and not open to external commentary.

In a statement, National Convenor Nasir Khuehami termed Pakistan's comments as misplaced, unwarranted, and a clear attempt to interfere in India's domestic matters. "This is entirely India's internal issue. Pakistan has no locus standi to comment on developments within our universities or democratic institutions. We categorically reject any such interference. This is none of their business. They should refrain from poking their nose into India's internal affairs," he said.

Highlighting Jamia's legacy, the Association noted that the university is not merely an academic institution but a historic centre of India's freedom struggle, intellectual thought, and constitutional values. Jamia has stood as a symbol of inclusive education, pluralism, and national integration. "To selectively invoke Jamia's legacy while attempting to internationalise campus-level developments is both ironic and disingenuous," the statement added.

He clarified that while there are genuine concerns and disagreements among students regarding the recent event associated with the Rashtriya Swayamsevak Sangh (RSS), such differences are part of a healthy democratic ecosystem. "Universities are spaces of debate, dissent, and dialogue. These issues will be addressed politically, constitutionally, and through institutional channels; not through external amplification or interference. We are fully capable of addressing our own issues through democratic, non-violent, and institutional mechanisms," Khuehami stated.

He further emphasised that dissent within campuses should not be misrepresented or exploited. "Differences of opinion are natural; after all, ours is a difference of ideas, not a personal or institutional rupture. Jamia's students and administration are fully capable of engaging with these issues within the framework of Indian democracy."

JKSA's Jamia Unit President, Sharif Khan, underscored that India has robust constitutional safeguards, an independent judiciary, a free media, an active civil society, and institutional mechanisms that ensure accountability and protect citizens' rights. "India does not require lectures on minority rights, democratic values, or institutional integrity from across the border," he said.

The Association cautioned against attempts to internationalise domestic discourse or project internal democratic processes as systemic crises. "Efforts to politicise or hijack student voices from outside India undermine the very agency of those students and distort the reality of democratic engagement in the country," it said.

Taking a firm stance, Khuehami added, "Before attempting to speak on our behalf, Pakistan should introspect and address its own internal challenges. India's sovereignty is absolute, and its internal matters are not open to foreign interpretation or intervention."

- ANI

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Reader Comments

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Priya S
Well said! Indian democracy is mature enough to handle internal disagreements. The JKSA stance is refreshing - they're saying "we can fix our own problems" without external interference. That's real patriotism, not the jingoistic kind. Respect to them for calling out Pakistan's hypocrisy. 👏
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Kavya N
I agree that Pakistan shouldn't interfere, but let's also be honest - the RSS event at Jamia was controversial. It's okay for students to protest peacefully. The government should ensure universities remain neutral spaces for debate, not platforms for any political ideology. That's the real issue here.
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Arjun K
"Before attempting to speak on our behalf, Pakistan should introspect" - this line is gold! They have no moral authority to talk about minority rights when they persecute their own minorities (Hindus, Christians, Ahmadis). India has a constitutional framework that protects everyone. Full support to JKSA for shutting down this nonsense. 💪
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Rohan X
Good statement but I wish the JKSA had also addressed the actual concerns of Jamia students about the RSS event. Dismissing Pakistan's interference is important, but so is acknowledging that many students feel their campus culture is being politicized. The two aren't mutually exclusive. India can handle both - rejecting foreign interference while addressing internal grievances.
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Vikram M
Exactly! Universities are meant for debate and dissent. External countries trying to amplify campus disagreements only hurt student agency. JKSA is right - we Indians are fully capable of sorting out our own differences through constitutional means. Let Pakistan worry about its own democratic deficit first. 🙏

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