14 suicides this year: Rajasthan HC livid over failure to enact law regulating coaching institutes

IANS May 15, 2025 137 views

The Rajasthan High Court has expressed severe concern over the rising student suicide rates in coaching institutes. A staggering 14 suicides have been reported from January to May, prompting judicial intervention. The court criticized the state's failure to enact regulations despite discussions since 2019. The draft Coaching Regulation Bill remains blocked, with political disagreements preventing meaningful action to protect students' mental health.

"Mere discussions without action serve no purpose" - Rajasthan High Court Bench
Jaipur, May 14: The Rajasthan High Court on Wednesday expressed strong displeasure over the state's failure to enact a law regulating coaching institutes, despite ongoing discussions since 2019.

Key Points

1

14 student suicides reported in Rajasthan from January to May

2

High Court takes suo motu cognizance of coaching institute issue

3

Draft Coaching Regulation Bill stalled by BJP opposition

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Mental health pressures on students highlighted

A division bench of Chief Justice M.M. Shrivastava and Justice Mukesh Rajpurohit criticised the inaction, especially in light of the alarming rise in student suicides -- 14 reported from January to May 8 this year. During the hearing, Advocate General Rajendra Prasad presented these figures.

The court, while noting that the Supreme Court is set to hear a related matter on May 23, scheduled the next hearing for two weeks later. The court had taken suo motu cognisance of the issue in 2016 following repeated suicides in Kota. Although a draft Coaching Regulation Bill was prepared and presented in the Assembly this year, it was later referred to a Select Committee due to opposition, particularly from BJP MLAs.

BJP's Kalicharan Saraf had criticised the bill, warning that its current form could drive coaching institutes out of Rajasthan, affecting jobs and a Rs 60,000 crore industry. He argued for broader consultation, better representation in oversight committees, and inclusion of Central guidelines like alerting parents if a student remains absent for two days.

The High Court stressed the urgency of addressing mental health pressures on students and implementing regulations, stating that mere discussions without action serve no purpose. BJP MLA Gopal Sharma raised questions on the missing provisions of the central guidelines in the Coaching Regulation Bill. Sharma said If there is a double-engine government, then let's move together. The central guidelines have a provision for teaching coaching to children above 16 years of age. Why is this provision missing from this bill?

Reader Comments

P
Priya K.
This is heartbreaking 💔 When will we stop treating our children like marks-producing machines? The government must act fast - no more committees and discussions. Every day's delay is costing young lives. Kota's coaching mafia won't regulate themselves!
R
Rahul S.
While regulation is needed, let's not throw the baby out with bathwater. Coaching institutes provide opportunities to lakhs of students from small towns. The solution lies in better counseling systems and parental awareness, not just laws.
A
Anjali M.
Shameful political games being played with students' lives! BJP MLAs opposing the bill should explain why they're protecting coaching institutes instead of children. "Double engine" government? More like double standards! 😤
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Vikram J.
The Rs 60,000 crore industry argument is nonsense. Human lives > business profits. But we also need to address the root cause - our education system's obsession with IIT/NEET. Why can't we create more quality colleges?
S
Sunita R.
As a Kota survivor myself, I know the pressure cooker environment. Simple measures like mandatory weekly offs, parent alerts for absenteeism (like CBSE suggests), and proper hostel inspections can save lives. Why is this so difficult to implement?

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