Students speak out as mistakes kill dreams: Why Delhi’s coaching institutes chose basements for their libraries | EXCLUSIVE

Delhi students are furious, angry and saddened after three UPSC aspirants died following flooding in the basement of a coaching centre. The investigation so far has revealed multiple lapses on the part of the institute and the authorities which claimed three innocent lives.

KEY POINTS

  1. The death of three civil service aspirants in Delhi has raised several questions for the government and local authorities.
  2. Students have been protesting for two days for this reason with various demands.
  3. Times Now Digital reached out to some of these students and training centres to understand the ground reality.

New Delhi: With big dreams in their eyes and even bigger expectations on their shoulders, students from across the country arrive in the national capital, Delhi, to lay the foundation for cracking one of the toughest exams in the country, the UPSC (Union Public Service Commission) Civil Services Examinations. When they leave their homes and loved ones and move into an unfamiliar territory, they are prepared for “anything” except failure. But does that “everything” mean their lives? Certainly not, and definitely not their parents. The recent tragedy in Delhi, where three UPSC aspirants lost their lives, possibly due to negligence of coaching institutes, has come as a shock not just to the families of the victims, but to the entire nation and has raised several questions.

Tanya, Nevin and Shreya, from Telangana, Ambedkar Nagar and Ernakulum in Kerala respectively, were there to realise their dreams. The three students died after the basement of the Rau IAS Study Circle was flooded on Saturday following heavy intermittent rains that lashed the city in a 24-hour cycle. Though a rescue operation was launched after nearly three hours, authorities were unable to save them and their bodies were recovered after midnight.

The tragic incident has prompted students to take to the streets to protest against the problem of libraries, now called “death traps”, in the basements of several of those educational institutions.