Congress spokesperson Manish Tewari also alleged that certain fascist forces have perked up across the country with the support of the present dispensation and urged all secular forces to unitedly fight them.
"The Finance Minister while addressing students said there is an alliance of subversion across universities campuses in India. He has insulted all the other elements which make up all the academic fraternity of India.
"He insulted the academia of India, students, teachers. The Finance Minister should apologise for the language he used against Indian academia and that too on foreign soil," Tewari said.
"When Mr Jaitley was President of DUSU in 1975, was he heading an 'Alliance of Subversion'?" the former finance minister said in a tweet yesterday.
Tewari claimed Jaitley's remarks reflect the deep-seated paranoia and fear in the government and the BJP that there is an instinctive alliance of subversion which is coming together across Indian universities.
He said the instinctive alliance of subversion is predicated on undermining the fascist principal which is so intrinsic in the government of the NDA and the BJP.
He said such tendencies challenge the fundamental precepts on which the Constitution rests and the ideals on which this country was founded and its is indicative of the kind of people the PM has chosen to follow on Twitter.
"Time has come for all progressive, pluralistic and patriotic forces to come together and fight this relentless assault on Indian democracy which is being fronted by elements of Sangh Parivar, but has the complete and absolute backing of the government, right up to the level of the PM," he claimed.
Tewari claimed that the alliance referred to by Jaitley
is challenging fascism, intolerance and their right to dominate the discourse which is making the government both "uneasy and paranoid".
He said the violence at Ramjas College was "abhorrent" but even more reprehensible was the attempt by the senior BJP functionaries and the ministers of the government to justify it.
"Let me make it very clear that nobody holds the brief for the balkanisation of India and nobody supports those who advocate the secession of India but it's equally important to understand that freedom of speech and expression also includes the right to offend," he said.
"Violence that took place in Ramjas College is not the solution and attempts to justify that violence by the senior functionaries of the government are both fascist and displays the arrogance of power.
He said the violence would not have been possible had the members of the ABVP known that the Delhi Police would not be a silent bystander.
The Congress leader said the Sangh Parivar supporters tried to question the patriotism of BSF jawan Tej Bahadur Yadav who exposed the alleged inadequacies in food served to paramilitary forces.
Noting that there is a pattern of "intimidation and violence which goes across the country", he gave examples of violence in Patiala House Court where the Delhi Police was a "silent bystander", incidents at JNU, the campuses of Haryana University, Hyderabad Central University.
To a question on whether there is a deliberate effort on the part of BJP to influence the Uttar Pradesh elections, Tewari said going by the statements of Prime Minister Narendra Modi it is very clear that he has lost faith in him.
"He only has faith in how this country can be communally polarised for making his political gains," he claimed.
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