<p>Cine star Deepika Padukone's visit to the Jawaharlal Nehru University (JNU) in solidarity with the protesting students kicked up a row on Tuesday evening as Delhi BJP spokesperson Tajinder Pal Singh Bagga gave a call to boycott her movies for her lending support to the “tukde tukde gang.”</p>.<p>“RT if you will Boycott Movies of @deepikapadukone for her Support to #TukdeTukdeGang and Afzal Gang,” the BJP leader tweeted, posting a picture of Padukone standing with the agitating students in the JNU campus.</p>.<p>Padukone visited the JNU campus and joined the agitating students to express her solidarity. CPI leader and ex-JNU president Kanhaiya Kumar was also present and raising slogans.</p>.<p>Meanwhile, the JNU alumni including CPI-M leaders Sitaram Yechury and Prakash Karat demanded a judicial enquiry into the January 5 violence in the campus “to fix responsibility and punish those responsible” for the incident.</p>.<p>“These four years have seen systematic attacks on the culture of academic freedom and the traditions of debate and dissent and inclusion that were the bed-rock of the academic brilliance that JNU is recognised for. It is these values that have seen serious erosion during the tenure of the present vice-chancellor (M Jagadesh Kumar) and the administration run by his cohorts,” they said in a joint statement.</p>
<p>Cine star Deepika Padukone's visit to the Jawaharlal Nehru University (JNU) in solidarity with the protesting students kicked up a row on Tuesday evening as Delhi BJP spokesperson Tajinder Pal Singh Bagga gave a call to boycott her movies for her lending support to the “tukde tukde gang.”</p>.<p>“RT if you will Boycott Movies of @deepikapadukone for her Support to #TukdeTukdeGang and Afzal Gang,” the BJP leader tweeted, posting a picture of Padukone standing with the agitating students in the JNU campus.</p>.<p>Padukone visited the JNU campus and joined the agitating students to express her solidarity. CPI leader and ex-JNU president Kanhaiya Kumar was also present and raising slogans.</p>.<p>Meanwhile, the JNU alumni including CPI-M leaders Sitaram Yechury and Prakash Karat demanded a judicial enquiry into the January 5 violence in the campus “to fix responsibility and punish those responsible” for the incident.</p>.<p>“These four years have seen systematic attacks on the culture of academic freedom and the traditions of debate and dissent and inclusion that were the bed-rock of the academic brilliance that JNU is recognised for. It is these values that have seen serious erosion during the tenure of the present vice-chancellor (M Jagadesh Kumar) and the administration run by his cohorts,” they said in a joint statement.</p>