
Dalit student’s death | IIT-B knew depth of issue and yet said discrimination not an issue, says APPSC
The Hindu
First-year Chemical Engineering student, Darshan Solanki, allegedly killed himself on campus; administration accused of negligence towards Dalit, Bahujan and Adivasi students
A day after the Indian Institute of Technology, Bombay admitted to having conducted two surveys in 2022 promising to end caste discrimination and “culture of exclusion”, the APPSC, a student body of the campus, said on Friday, “The institute already knew the depth of the issue and yet they keep saying there were only few complaints of caste discrimination. Every testimony given in the survey and open house should be considered as a case of caste discrimination suo moto.”
This comes days after first-year Chemical Engineering student, Darshan Solanki, allegedly killed himself on the campus, with students accusing the administration of not doing enough in time to address discrimination faced by Dalit, Bahujan and Adivasi students.
A day later, the institute condoled the 18-year-old’s death and said, “Discrimination by students, if at all it occurs, is an exception,” even as Solanki’s family members started alleging discrimination.
However, after The Hindu reported that the institute had conducted two surveys in 2022, months before Solanki started at IIT-B, which documented experiences of caste discrimination faced by nearly 400 SC/ST students on campus, the institute admitted to the surveys and said it was done to “prioritise tasks ahead”.
In response to this, the APPSC said, “Even after all this data was available, the mandate for SC/ST cell was not passed, SC/ST counsellors were not appointed, the SC/ST mentorship programme wasn’t given proper funding and structure like other institute mentorship programmes. Even getting a room for the cell was hard.”
The student body added that Insight, a student newspaper, had also surveyed caste discrimination in December, 2021 but the results were also not allowed to be made public.
“The institute is scared to admit that the campus atmosphere is unsafe and discriminatory,” it said in a series of tweets on the social media platform.

Former CM B.S. Yediyurappa had challenged the first information report registered on March 14, 2024, on the alleged incident that occurred on February 2, 2024, the chargesheet filed by the Criminal Investigation Department (CID), and the February 28, 2025, order of taking cognisance of offences afresh by the trial court.