HomeEducationDelhi coaching hub tragedy: Why UPSC aspirants flock to poorly-run institutes

Delhi coaching hub tragedy: Why UPSC aspirants flock to poorly-run institutes

A palpable sense of dread haunts the busy streets, where hope to crack the UPSC code springs eternal among countless young minds.

August 05, 2024 / 16:57 IST
Story continues below Advertisement
Aman Tyagi, 23, pays around Rs 1.75 lakh as tution fee, in addition to Rs 18,000 for accommodation which does not include electricity and laundry charges.
Aman Tyagi, 23, pays around Rs 1.75 lakh as tution fee, in addition to Rs 18,000 for accommodation which does not include electricity and laundry charges.

The Supreme Court on Monday equated Delhi's cramped and ill-constructed UPSC coaching centres to "death chambers... taking away the lives of young ones coming from different parts of the country." On July 27, three students had died by drowning when heavy rains flooded the basement library of a coaching centre in Old Rajendra Nagar.

“What happened on July 27 was horrifying. The thought that ‘it could have been me’ has haunted me since then,” recalls a 23-year-old Union Public Service Commission (UPSC) aspirant, who luckily left for home around 1 pm, hours before three students drowned in the flooded basement of a coaching centre, Rau’s IAS Study Circle, at Rajendra Nagar in Delhi.

Story continues below Advertisement

The incident claimed the lives of Shreya Yadav, Nivin Dalwin and Tanya Soni, who belonged to Uttar Pradesh, Kerala, and Telangana, respectively.

In a damning indictment, the owner of Rau’s IAS Study Circle could not produce the valid documents that are required to run the coaching centre in the basement.