"If you ask me on the JNU incident, it is nothing but a breach of law. JNU incident was a crime. That's it. The whole issue became overblown because it was politicised and then police was expected to go easy," Bedi said.
The former policewoman was speaking at an event organised by CII Young India here which was attended by Bangladeshi author Taslima Nasreen and transgender activist Laxmi Narayan Tripathi.
"There has been weakening of the rule of law over a period. We have brought it to a very 'lachkila' flexible level where it should not be. So we are to reverse the trend. As a nation, India must start respecting rule of law and accept no compromises, whoever it may be - high or low," she said.
She went on to say that while Article 19 of the Constitution details freedom of expression, one must not overlook the clause that free speech comes with responsibility.
Transgender activist Tripathi said it was "wrong" to call students "anti-nationals" but said universities must be treated in a "dignified fashion."
Tripathi, who is the first transgender person to represent Asia Pacific in the UN, pointed out how research scholar Rohith Vemula's suicide faded out amidst the JNU controversy and asserted that universities must not be treated like "playgrounds for politicians."
"Today JNU has become a hot potato, tomorrow BHU and TISS will become one. Universities cannot be playground of politicians. A university has to be a university and it has to be treated and dignified in that fashion," she said.
