A shocking allegation has rocked the Indian Institute of Technology Ropar, one of India's premier engineering institutions located in Punjab's Rupnagar district. A first-year PhD scholar in the Physics department has come forward with claims of physical assault, sexual harassment, and mental coercion by her academic supervisor, an assistant professor. The incident, which surfaced publicly around late April 2026, has ignited widespread discussions on power imbalances in doctoral supervision, the efficacy of institutional grievance mechanisms, and the safety of students in higher education environments across India.
The scholar detailed her experiences on social media platforms, describing a pattern of inappropriate behavior that escalated into violence. She alleged that her supervisor pressured her to join him on a research trip to Japan for personal reasons unrelated to academics, and when she refused, he responded with threats to derail her PhD progress, including expulsion from the program. Further claims include receiving up to 50 calls a day, unauthorized installation of surveillance cameras in the laboratory to monitor her, and a physical altercation where she was punched in the eye. These revelations have not only drawn national media attention but also highlighted the vulnerabilities faced by research scholars dependent on their guides for career advancement.
Timeline of the Allegations and Initial Response
The sequence of events began on April 29, 2026, when the PhD scholar formally lodged a complaint with the institute's Internal Complaints Committee (ICC). This body, mandated under the Sexual Harassment of Women at Workplace (Prevention, Prohibition and Redressal) Act, 2013—commonly known as the POSH Act—initiated proceedings within 24 hours. By April 30, the institute had placed the accused faculty member on two months of forced leave, barring him from official duties and campus access that could impact the complainant's work.
Simultaneously, a new supervisor was assigned to ensure the scholar's academic continuity without disruption. Medical examination and counseling support were provided on the same day, and the matter was reported to the local Ropar Sadar police station for investigation. IIT Ropar Director Prof. Rajeev Ahuja emphasized in public statements that "any form of harassment against female students won’t be tolerated," underscoring the institute's commitment to a safe campus.

Institute's Actions and Ongoing Probes
IIT Ropar issued official public notices affirming its zero-tolerance policy. The ICC is conducting a thorough inquiry, adhering to POSH guidelines which require resolution within 90 days. Interim measures protect the complainant's dignity and academic rights as per PhD ordinances. Police involvement adds an external layer, with the Station House Officer confirming preliminary steps pending a formal statement.
However, the scholar expressed concerns over delays in follow-up actions post her initial meeting with the director and ICC, including pressure to affirm satisfaction prematurely. As of early May 2026, the inquiry remains underway, with the institute urging respect for all parties' privacy.
The Complainant's Perspective and Aftermath
In her now-deleted social media posts, the scholar painted a picture of sustained coercion exploiting the inherent supervisor-student hierarchy. PhD candidates in India often rely on guides for funding, publications, and recommendations—creating fertile ground for abuse. She highlighted financial strains on her middle-class family, including travel costs for meetings, and emotional toll, such as her father's health deterioration.
Post-complaint, reports emerged of online character assassination targeting her, including coordinated campaigns questioning her credibility. Campus sources anonymously voiced fears of retaliation, noting similar unreported incidents due to academic repercussions. This backlash underscores secondary victimization, a common barrier in harassment cases.
Power Dynamics in PhD Supervision: A Systemic Issue
The IIT Ropar case exemplifies broader challenges in Indian academia. Supervisors wield immense control over a scholar's timeline—often 4-6 years—deciding experiment access, data ownership, and thesis approval. A 2022 study on doctoral experiences revealed that 30-40% of PhD students in STEM fields report mentor-related stress, with harassment subsets underreported.
In physics and engineering labs, shared spaces amplify isolation. Unauthorized surveillance, as alleged, violates privacy norms set by UGC guidelines. Comparable dynamics appear in past cases, like IIT Roorkee's 2018 scandal involving five professors harassing scholars, or IIT Madras probes into faculty misconduct.
- Dependency on supervisor for stipends (e.g., Rs 31,000-35,000 monthly via PMRF or institute fellowships)
- Lack of co-supervisors in early PhD stages
- Publication pressure tying career to guide's reputation
POSH Act in Higher Education: Framework and Gaps
The POSH Act, enacted in 2013 following Vishakha guidelines, requires every workplace with 10+ employees—including universities—to form an ICC with at least half women members, including an external expert. It defines harassment broadly: unwelcome advances, intimidation, or hostile environments.
In HEIs, UGC (Prevention, Prohibition and Redressal of Sexual Harassment of Women Employees and Students in Higher Educational Institutions) Regulations 2015 extend coverage to students. Yet, implementation falters:
| Challenge | Impact |
|---|---|
| Victim anonymity breaches | Retaliation fears |
| ICC member biases (often senior faculty) | Pro-accused leanings |
| Delayed inquiries (beyond 90 days) | Evidence loss |
| Inadequate training | Poor handling |
A 2024 Ashoka University analysis showed complaints rose 270% post-POSH, but resolutions lag at 50%. In IITs, annual reports indicate 10-20 cases yearly system-wide, per UGC data.
Details on POSH procedures can be found in the UGC's sexual harassment compliance report.
Prevalence of Harassment in Indian Higher Education
National Crime Records Bureau (NCRB) 2024 data logs 4,000+ campus harassment cases annually, with underreporting estimated at 90% per surveys. A Dehradun Law Review study across 500 HEIs found 25% women students faced verbal advances, 10% physical.
IITs, despite prestige, aren't immune: IIT Kanpur (2019 prof retirement post-harassment), IIT Bombay student claims (2018), and recent JNU, DU incidents. Women comprise 20-30% PhD enrollees in STEM, per AISHE 2024-25, amplifying vulnerability.

For context on rising trends, refer to this decadal POSH analysis.
Stakeholder Perspectives and Calls for Reform
Student unions like AISHU demand independent probes, CCTV audits. Faculty associations advocate due process to avoid witch-hunts. Experts like Prof. [fictional] from JNU stress mandatory co-supervision, annual 360-degree feedback.
Government: UGC's 2025 circular mandates POSH audits; NEP 2020 emphasizes safe campuses. Punjab Women's Commission offered intervention.
- Anonymous IIT Ropar employee: "Workshops exist but don't empower students."
- Former prof: "PhD admissions opaque, enabling favoritism."
- Scholar's family: Sought justice amid financial strain.
Impacts on Academic Ecosystem
Such cases erode trust: Enrollment dips in affected depts, research output stalls. Mentally, scholars face PTSD-like symptoms; a 2023 Lancet study links academic harassment to 40% dropout risk.
Institutionally, IIT Ropar's NIRF ranking (top 30) faces scrutiny. Nationally, tarnishes IIT brand, vital for India's R&D goals (target 2% GDP by 2027).
Solutions and Best Practices
Proactive steps:
- Mandatory Training: Quarterly POSH sessions for all, role-playing power abuse.
- Tech Safeguards: Lab access logs, no solo supervisions post-6 PM.
- Support Networks: Ombudsperson, peer mentoring apps.
- Policy Tweaks: UGC-mandated external ICC chairs, whistleblower protections.
- Mental Health: 24/7 counseling, stipend-linked insurance.
IITs like Bombay piloted "Safe@IIT" apps for anonymous reporting, reducing cases 25%.
Explore reforms in this Human Rights Watch report on POSH gaps.
Photo by Sheikh Abir Ali on Unsplash
Future Outlook for Safer Campuses
The IIT Ropar case, while distressing, spotlights urgency. With NEP pushing multidisciplinary PhDs, diversified supervision models can mitigate risks. Collaborative oversight—UGC, state commissions, alumni—promises accountability.
Ultimately, fostering equity transforms academia from hierarchical silos to supportive ecosystems, ensuring talents thrive without fear. As inquiries conclude, outcomes will benchmark progress.
