The Supreme Court on
Monday stressed on having "uniform standards" to the extent possible
to ensure safety and security of students studying at coaching centres.
A bench of Justices Surya Kant and Ujjal Bhuyan was
hearing a matter related to the deaths of three civil service aspirants at a
coaching centre in the national capital in July due to the flooding in the
building's basement.
On
July 27, the three students drowned in the basement library of Rau's IAS Study
Circle in Delhi's Old Rajinder Nagar area after it was flooded following heavy
rains.
The top court was
informed by senior advocate Siddharth Dave, who is assisting the top court as
an amicus curiae, about the broad areas that required attention.
Dave referred to the aspects of fire safety, fee regulation,
student to classroom area ratio, student to teacher ratio, installation of
CCTVs, medical facilities, mental health care and counselling for those
studying at coaching centres.
He suggested that all states be impleaded as parties
in the matter.
The amicus further referred to the legislation
dealing with coaching institutes in seven states.
When Dave suggested
some sort of an oversight, the bench said it should be permanent.
"It can't be that an unfortunate incident occurs and then suddenly one become
aware of everything," the bench observed.
The apex court
pointed out the need to have uniform standards on the issue.
The respondent
authorities were asked to offer suggestions to the amicus on the desirability
of a comprehensive policy for coaching institutes, initially with respect to
the National Capital Region (NCR).
The matter will be
heard after two weeks.
While hearing the
matter on September 20, the top court had directed a Union government-appointed
committee probing the three deaths to submit an interim report about the
measures it wanted to be taken to prevent recurrence of such incidents.
The apex court had also asked the Haryana, Uttar Pradesh and Delhi governments
to apprise it of the policy and legislative and administrative changes made to
prevent such incidents in future.
It had said uniform
initiatives should be taken in the entire NCR to prevent another Old Rajinder
Nagar-type incident from happening.
The top court had
said the panel could consider intervention at the legislative, policy, and
administrative levels, apart from eliciting views of all the stakeholders
before making its recommendations.
The apex court had
also said it would be covering the "wider canvas" and would examine
the issue at pan-India level to ensure such incidents did not occur again
elsewhere.
On August 5, the top court had observed that coaching centres had become
"death chambers" and were playing with the lives of students.
It had taken
cognisance of the matter while hearing a petition filed by an association of
coaching centres challenging a December 2023 Delhi High Court order which
directed the city's fire services and the civic body to inspect all coaching
centres to ascertain if they were complying with fire safety norms.
The high court had
transferred the probe into the death of the three students from Delhi Police to
the CBI "to ensure the public has no doubt over the investigation".
The three UPSC aspirants who drowned were Shreya Yadav (25) of Uttar Pradesh,
Tanya Soni (25) of Telangana and Nevin Delvin (24) of Kerala.