Gandhi statue vandalisation
The act comes months after pro-Khalistani groups staged protests in London during External Affairs Minister S. Jaishankarโ€™s visit to the UK in March. At that time, demonstrators gathered outside Chatham House, waving flags and chanting slogans

Guwahati: The High Commission of India in London has slammed the vandalisation of a Mahatma Gandhi statue at Tavistock Square.

It called it a โ€œshameful actโ€ and a โ€œviolent attack on the idea of nonviolence.โ€ The incident comes just three days ahead of the International Day of Non-Violence, observed annually on Gandhiโ€™s birth anniversary, October 2.

Inย  an X statement, the High Commission said, โ€œThis is not just vandalism, but a violent attack on the idea of nonviolence and on the legacy of the Mahatma.โ€

The High Commission added that the issue has been โ€œtaken up stronglyโ€ with local authorities, and its officials are working on-site to restore the statueโ€™s dignity.

The act comes months after pro-Khalistani groups staged protests in London during External Affairs Minister S. Jaishankarโ€™s visit to the UK in March. At that time, demonstrators gathered outside Chatham House, waving flags and chanting slogans.

India has repeatedly condemned such incidents, stressing that separatists are misusing democratic freedoms to carry out provocative activities. Following the protests earlier this year, the Ministry of External Affairs (MEA) warned that the UK must โ€œfully live up to its diplomatic obligationsโ€ in ensuring security for Indian officials and safeguarding the dignity of Indian symbols abroad.