Dharmendra Pradhan orders investigate into NCERT officials over blacklisting case lapse in Delhi HC
Press Trust of India | July 10, 2026 | 08:48 PM IST | 2 mins read
The Education Ministry will examine why NCERT's case against a paper supplier went undefended and review the firm's selection and contract compliance
New Delhi: Education Minister Dharmendra Pradhan has ordered a probe into the role of NCERT officials who failed in defending in the high court a decision of "black listing action" against a firm tasked with supplying paper for textbooks, sources said. Bafna Global Venture Private Limited moved the Delhi High Court on June 24 citing the blacklisting order by NCERT issued on June 22 barring it for two years from participating in the procurement process of National Council of Educational Research and Training (NCERT).
While nobody from the NCERT appeared for the high court hearing, the court granted immunity to the firm from coercive action till further orders. The court also restrained the NCERT from invoking over Rs 6 crore bank guarantee furnished by the paper supplier. "Taking serious note of reports that NCERT failed to effectively defend its decision to blacklist a paper supplier before the Delhi High Court, Education Minister Dharmendra Pradhan has directed strict action against the officers responsible for the lapse," a source said.
Also read 'Diagnosed with SLD by accident’: Adults fighting ADHD, dyslexia, dyscalculia have neither measure nor relief
"The minister has ordered accountability for the officials be fixed who failed to take the necessary legal steps, reinforcing a zero-tolerance approach towards administrative and legal lapses while ensuring greater accountability in textbook production and procurement," the source added. The source further said that the minister while cracking the whip on officials who have defied the high court directions, ordered for initiating strict legal action against them.
"The ministry has asked NCERT to examine how Bafna Global Venture Private Limited was selected despite allegedly not meeting the required conditions, why it subsequently failed to adhere to the paper-supply schedule and how the council's case went unrepresented in court," the source said. The firm argued in the court that the delay in printing of books was because hydrogen peroxide, the bleaching agent for the purpose of manufacturing of paper, was not available to the war in Iran. The case is now listed for July 20 in the Delhi High Court.
Follow us for the latest education news on colleges and universities, admission, courses, exams, research, education policies, study abroad and more..
To get in touch, write to us at news@careers360.com.
Next Story
]Featured News
]- 'Diagnosed with SLD by accident’: Adults fighting ADHD, dyslexia, dyscalculia have neither measure nor relief
- Over 70% Indians in Germany find right job, fit into workforce, but language a major hurdle: Study
- AISHE Report: SC, ST faculty at just 10% and 3%, women drop from 44% at entry level to 27% at professor rank
- Has DST scrapped INSPIRE-SHE scholarship? No notice, list, budget or clarity leaves students wondering
- In National Pharmacy Commission Bill, exit test after B.Pharm, board for AYUSH and reduced state role
- UDISE+ 2025-26: SC, OBC enrolment hits 6-year low; over 8,000 govt schools shut in a year as 26 lakh drop out
- NIPER Hyderabad, Ahmedabad bet on COEs, revamping pharmacy syllabus with AI, med-tech courses: Director
- Visva Bharati Recruitment: Complaint to PM alleges DR selection records destroyed; varsity says ‘ridiculous’
- Sowa Rigpa: India’s Tibetan medicine students must know the language before they treat patients
- Missing labs, teachers, entire colleges – why SRTMU Nanded cracked down on BSc admissions