Disturbing Pattern Of Student Suicides Being Reported From Various Educational Institutes Across Country: Supreme Court Constitutes National Task Force To Address Mental Health Concerns Of Students
The Supreme Court addressed the alleged caste-based discrimination and mental health concerns at IIT Delhi following the suicides of two students.
Justice J.B. Pardiwala, Justice R. Mahadevan, Supreme Court
The Supreme Court has constituted a National Task Force to address the mental health concerns of students and prevent the commission of suicides in Higher Educational Institutions after observing the disturbing pattern of student suicides being reported from various educational institutes across the country.
The Court addressed the alleged caste-based discrimination and mental health concerns at IIT Delhi following the suicides of two students, Ayush Ashna and Anil Kumar. The families of the deceased students, seeking a criminal investigation into the deaths, alleged caste-based harassment by faculty and peers. The Petitions urged the registration of FIRs and an independent inquiry under the SC/ST (Prevention of Atrocities) Act, 1989. However, the Delhi Police, after an inquiry under Section 174 of the CrPC, concluded that both deaths were suicides due to academic pressure and found no evidence of caste-based discrimination.
A Bench of Justice JB Pardiwala and Justice R Mahadevan held, “The Police could not have taken a shortcut just because something happened in the hostel of an eminent educational institution like IIT Delhi. It seems that the Police very quickly jumped to the conclusion that the two boys were in some sort of depression as they were not doing well in their studies. Such conclusion of the Police may as well be correct. However, again, at the cost of repetition, we say that such a conclusion could have been arrived at only after following the due process of law, i.e., registration of an F.I.R. and investigation.”
Advocate Mehmood Pracha represented the Appellant, while ASG Brijender Chahar appeared for the Respondent.
Brief Facts
The families claimed that Ayush Ashna, a B.Tech (Mathematics and Computing) student, had repeatedly informed them about discrimination by hostel mates and faculty. His father alleged in his complaint that Ayush was deliberately failed in subjects and was found hanging in his hostel room under suspicious circumstances. Similarly, Amit Kumar, the elder brother of Anil Kumar, filed a complaint stating that Anil was subjected to casteist remarks by professors and that bloodstains in his hostel room indicated foul play.
Court’s Reasoning
The Supreme Court noted that all the Police did in the course of the inquiry under Section 174 of the CrPC was to record the statements of other students belonging to SC/ST category studying in IIT Delhi, who stated that there was no caste-based discrimination in the hostel.
The Bench held, “Registration of an F.I.R. is mandatory under Section 154 of the Code, if the information discloses commission of a cognizable offence and no preliminary inquiry is permissible in such a situation…The police officer cannot avoid his duty of registering the offence if a cognizable offence is disclosed. Action must be taken against erring officers who do not register an F.I.R. if information received by them discloses a cognizable offence.”
The Court pointed out that the responsibility of maintaining the safety and well-being of students rests heavily on the administration of every educational institution. Therefore, in the event of any unfortunate incident, such as a suicide occurring on campus, the Court held that “it becomes their unequivocal duty to promptly lodge an F.I.R. with the appropriate authorities. Such action is not only a legal obligation but also a moral imperative to ensure transparency, accountability, and the pursuit of justice.”
While the Bench directed the registration of an FIR in the case, it also stated, “We deem it absolutely necessary to discuss the disturbing pattern of student suicides being reported from various educational institutes across the country.”
Acknowledging the “suicide epidemic in educational institutions”, the Supreme Court noted, “What disturbs us even more is that the abovementioned incidents are not isolated one-off occurrences but are only a few out of the many which have taken place over a period of time owing to a multitude of reasons like ragging, academic pressure, caste-based discrimination, sexual harassment, etc. As per the data provided by the Union Minister of State for Education to the Rajya Sabha in 2023, 98 students died by suicide in higher educational institutes since 2018, out of which 39 were from IITs, 25 from NITs, 25 from central universities, four from IIMs, three from IISERs and two from IIITs.”
“These distressing incidents not only highlight systemic failures but also expose a severe lack of institutional empathy and accountability on the part of educational institutions. When academic environments fail to address discrimination, harassment, and mental health concerns effectively, they contribute to a culture of neglect that can have devastating consequences,” the Court remarked.
Consequently, the Court ordered, “These tragedies underscore the urgent need for a more robust, comprehensive, and responsive mechanism to address the various factors which compel certain students to resort to taking their own lives. In light of the concerns expressed above, a National Task Force to address the mental health concerns of students and prevent the commission of suicides in Higher Educational Institutions is being constituted.”
Accordingly, the Supreme Court directed the Registry to notify this matter after four months alongwith the interim report of the Task Force.
Cause Title: Amit Kumar & Ors. v. Union of India & Ors. (Neutral Citation: 2025 INSC 384)
Appearance:
Appellant: AOR R.H.A. Sikander; Advocates Mehmood Pracha, Jatin Bhatt, Sanawar, Kshitij Singh and Nujhat Naseem
Respondent: ASG Brijender Chahar; AOR Mukesh Kumar Maroria; Advocates Abhijit Pandove, Amit Sharma Ii, Bani Dikshit, Varun Chugh and Gaurang Bhushan