FIR registered against 13 in Hansraj College fest violence case

An FIR has been registered against 13 people, including some suspended students of Delhi University's Hansraj College, following violence during the college's annual festival. Filed on April 24 at Maurice Nagar police station on principal Rama Sharma's complaint, it invokes Bharatiya Nyaya Sanhita provisions for criminal trespass and voluntarily causing hurt. The principal cited a breakdown in campus discipline.

Violence erupted at Hansraj College's annual festival on April 8 and 9, with videos showing clashes between students and outsiders near the entrance. The college administration called in Delhi Police to restore order amid the chaos.

Between April 20 and 25, the college suspended 30 students for alleged involvement in the violence and defaming the institution on social media. Some of those named in the FIR, registered on April 24, were among them. Principal Rama Sharma told The Indian Express, “We had to involve the Delhi Police as the situation was getting out of hand.” She included four student union office-bearers in the complaint.

On Monday, Sharma agreed to review two show-cause notices—one against four union office-bearers and another listing seven students for online activities harming the academic environment. “We are always open for dialogue,” she said. No review has started for those in the FIR, though she invited them to discuss.

Student union president Abhijit Singh alleged the crackdown targeted politically active students. The administration rejected this, emphasizing the need to protect studying students' academics at the prestigious college. Tensions had risen earlier in February over a private wedding on campus grounds linked to the principal's family.

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Police arresting two bus drivers outside a sleeper bus in New Delhi's Rani Bagh at night.
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Woman gang-raped inside bus in Delhi’s Rani Bagh, two arrested

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Police arrested two bus drivers after a woman was gang-raped inside a private sleeper bus in Rani Bagh, New Delhi, late on May 11. The accused have been identified as Umesh Kumar and Ramender. An FIR has been filed and the vehicle seized as investigations continue.

Police in Pune have booked five students of Indian Law Society (ILS) Law College for ragging a second-year student. The 35-year-old complainant alleged the incidents occurred between October and December 2024-2025 after he reported alcohol consumption in the hostel. An FIR has been registered under the Maharashtra Prohibition of Ragging Act, 1999.

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In the ongoing probe into Al-Falah University's fake NAAC accreditation claims—linked to the November 2025 Red Fort car blast—Delhi Police has filed two charge sheets citing statements from at least eight former students who were misled into enrolling.

Ghazipur district administration has imposed prohibitory orders under BNSS Section 163 across the district till April 30 amid law and order concerns over a teenage girl's death on April 15. Samajwadi Party chief Akhilesh Yadav announced he will visit the family on April 29, calling it a repeat of the Hathras case. The victim's father opposed political leaders' visits.

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Members of NSUI and Yuva Sena protested outside a Pune college on Sunday demanding action on the alleged 2026 NEET paper leak and the resignation of Union Education Minister Dharmendra Pradhan.

India's Supreme Court has agreed to consider a plea by Sanatani Sangsad highlighting violence in West Bengal after the 2021 state polls. The application seeks a high-level monitoring committee chaired by a retired Supreme Court judge to oversee the state's law and order machinery. The bench directed the petitioner to implead the CBI as a party.

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Madhya Pradesh Chief Minister Mohan Yadav announced financial assistance of ₹5 lakh each to families of three men who died in 2003 Bhojshala protests.

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