
Uproar intensifies against new UGC equity regulations
The Hindu
Growing backlash against UGC's 2026 regulations highlights alleged bias against general category students, prompting legal and political challenges.
Opposition against the University Grants Commission (UGC)’s new regulations on the promotion of equity in higher education campuses intensified on Monday (January 26, 2026), with critics questioning the 2026 rules’ definition of “caste-based discrimination” and alleging bias against “general category” students in not providing for measures against “false complaints”.
A writ petition challenging the University Grants Commission (Promotion of Equity in Higher Education Institutions) Regulations, 2026 has been filed in the Supreme Court by Mrityunjay Tiwari, a post-doctoral researcher at the Banaras Hindu University, Uttar Pradesh. His advocate, Neeraj Singh, told The Hindu, “We are trying to mention the matter in court tomorrow (Tuesday).”
Political opposition to the regulations has also grown. Rajya Sabha MP Priyanka Chaturvedi took to social media, calling for the regulations to be “withdrawn or amended as necessary”. She asked whether the provisions should not be “inclusive and ensure equal protection for everyone,” adding, “Then why is this discrimination in the implementation of the law? What happens in case of false accusations? How will guilt be determined? How should discrimination be defined—through words, actions, or perceptions?”
Uttar Pradesh Bharatiya Janata Party MLC Devendra Pratap Singh has written to the UGC, saying it should be concerned with protecting discrimination against Dalits and backward class students, and not with “making general category students feel unsafe. “The framed regulations could widen the caste-centric division and disturb the social balance,” he wrote in the letter, adding that equity is necessary, but it should not marginalise any section of students.
Student bodies have also joined the opposition. The students’ union of Kumaun University in Uttarakhand’s Nainital has submitted a letter to the UGC, saying that the regulations went against the “principle of natural justice”. In their letter, submitted through the Vice-Chancellor of the University, the students’ union said that these regulations may disturb the “balance” at university campuses and could create an atmosphere of “fear and distrust”, potentially leading to the regulations’ “misuse”.
Amid growing criticism, BJP MP from Jharkhand Nishikant Dubey said on social media that “all misconceptions” about the new regulations would soon be addressed, adding that it was the PM Narendra Modi-led Government that introduced a 10% reservation for economically weaker sections (EWS) among “poor Savarnas”. He said, “As long as Modi ji is there, no harm will come to the children of the upper castes.”













