Hyderabad: A group of protesters, including Rohit Vemula's mother Radhik Vemula, were detained by the police Tuesday after they tried to enter into the University of Hyderabad (UoH) to take part in a meet organized in memory of the dalit research scholar on his first death anniversary.
The protesters comprising a number of students' organizations had assembled in front of the UoH main gate as part of "Shahadat Din" of Vemula, who was found hanging in a hostel room on the varsity campus on January 17 last year.
Apart from Radhike, his son Raja Vemula and six other students were detained by the police.
A section of students under the aegis of Joint Action Committee for Social Justice - UOH had said they would gather at the 'Rohit Stupa' to remember his legacy and to vow that fight will go on against "casteism and communalism".
The protesters marched toward the main entrance gate of UoH, raised slogans against UoH vice-chancellor Apparao Podile and sought his arrest.
Holding placards reading "Justice for Rohit Vemula", the protesters marched toward the main gate and tried to forcibly enter by removing the barricade placed in front of the main gate.
Police immediately took them away in a vehicle even as JAC members assembled near the main gate after coming from inside the campus.
Vemula's suicide had sparked massive protests nationwide, resulting in a fierce political slugfest, with a string of political parties and dalit organizations siding with students and accusing the BJP and varsity administration of being anti-dalit.
Also, it had triggered a huge political furore with the then HRD minister Smriti Irani coming under attack along with labor Minister Bandaru Dattatreya for having written a letter related to the matter.
Raising questions on Rohit Vemula's dalit status, a commission constituted by the HRD ministry after the scholar's death had said the material on record did not establish it and attributed his suicide to personal reasons.
However, National Commission for Scheduled Castes (NCSC) chairman P.L. Punia had rejected the judicial commission's report on Vemula's suicide as fake and fictitious, and said the deceased research scholar was a dalit.