Sun, 24 May 2026 · LIVE
Updated May 24, 2026 · 09:46
Jammu And Kashmir News Updated May 24, 2026

J-K School in Cracks: Students Study Under Unsafe Veranda Amid Heatwave

Over 60 students at Government Middle School in Manglian, Udhampur, are studying in an unsafe veranda after their building developed dangerous cracks from landslides in August 2025. An intense summer heatwave prevents outdoor classes, forcing students to sit beneath visible cracks. Students Simran and Preeti have appealed to the government for a new building. Chief Education Officer Subash Gupta has promised a temporary tent system and a land survey for a permanent solution within 6-8 months.

J-K: Students face safety crisis as govt middle school in Manglian develops cracks

Udhampur, May 24

More than sixty students of the Government Middle School in Manglian, located in Udhampur district, are facing a severe crisis as their school building has been left highly compromised.

The structure developed dangerous cracks following heavy rainfall and a series of landslides in August 2025, raising serious safety concerns for the children and staff.

The situation has been worsened by an intense ongoing summer heatwave, which prevents students from taking their lessons outside in the open air. Consequently, they are forced to study in the veranda of the structurally unsafe building, sitting directly beneath the visible cracks while trying to escape the scorching heat.

Urging immediate action, the students have appealed to the government of the Jammu and Kashmir union territory and the education department to expedite the sanctioning and construction of a new school building.

They highlighted that sitting inside the classrooms is entirely unsafe, leaving them with no choice but to crowd into the veranda until a secure environment is provided.

Speaking with ANI, a student, Simran, said, "The problem is that whenever it rains, this school has been damaged since then. And we sat outside all winter. Even now in summer, we sit outside only. We want to request that this building be built as soon as possible."

Another student, Preeti, said, "Due to so much sunlight, we cannot study. The teacher teaches us, but our school is broken. There are big problems in our school. We sit outside, now for a few days we are sitting inside the broken school. We also go to the 'baoli' (stepwell) to drink water, and our school's bathrooms are also damaged. I want to request that the government build our school as soon as possible."

Meanwhile, Chief Education Officer Udhampur Subash Gupta stated that the administration does not want young school children to suffer. He noted that summer vacations lasting approximately one and a half months are expected to be announced within a few days, and this period will be used on a priority basis to find an immediate solution until a new building is constructed.

The education official has already directed the concerned zonal education officer to submit a detailed report and assess land feasibility.

"We will write a letter to the ZEO today, the concerned ZEO, to get a written report on nearby land so we can work it out as a building cannot be built here. We'll forward it to the DC office, district administration, to the ACR (Assistant Commissioner Revenue) sir for alternative government land. We'll try to suggest this at the earliest, within 1-2 months, as summer vacations are also coming. After that, once August comes, the permanent solution might take 6 to 7 or 8 months, but meanwhile, we'll arrange a tent system for the safety of children as schools reopen," he said.

He also mentioned that officials will soon meet with sarpanches, panches, parents, and local residents to identify suitable land so that the construction process can begin as soon as possible, assuring students that their studies will not be disrupted.

— ANI

Reader Comments

Shreya B

The 'baoli' water source and broken bathrooms show how basic infrastructure is failing in rural J-K. I appreciate the education department's response, but 'summer vacations' shouldn't be an excuse to delay action. Also, why weren't repairs done after August 2025 landslides? 😔

Aman W

Hats off to the students Simran and Preeti for speaking up despite their circumstances. Their courage reminds me of how resilient our children are. But honestly, why does it always take an ANI report to get things moving? The administration should have been proactive after the first cracks appeared. Jai Hind 🇮🇳

Karthik V

This is a classic example of 'chalta hai' attitude in Indian governance. The building has been damaged since August 2025—almost 9 months ago! Now only after media coverage, they promise a tent and land survey. What about accountability for the delay? Our children deserve better than this negligence. 😡

Jessica F

Living in the US, I see school safety as a top priority. It's shocking that Indian students have to sit under cracked ceilings for basic education. The CEO's promise of a tent is a start, but the 6-8 month timeline for a new building seems too slow. Hoping the district administration fast-tracks this. 🙏

Aryan P

This is where our tax money should go—safe schools for every child. The fact that kids are studying in a veranda beneath cracks while officials talk about 'feasibility reports' is a failure of governance. Kudos to the local community pushing for change. Hope the sarpanch and parents meeting yields quick results

We welcome thoughtful discussions from our readers. Please keep comments respectful and on-topic.

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