Odisha: Scheduled tribes commission to probe death of tribal girl after eating 'stale food' at school
Press Trust of India | April 27, 2026 | 09:24 PM IST | 2 mins read
Odisha Schools: The move comes three days after the National Human Rights Commission (NHRC) took suo motu cognisance of the incident
BHUBASNESWAR: The National Commission for Scheduled Tribes (NCST) said it will probe the death of a class 5 tribal student and the illness of more than 100 others after they allegedly consumed stale food at a state-run residential school in Odisha's Mayurbhanj district.
The move comes three days after the National Human Rights Commission (NHRC) took suo motu cognisance of the incident. In a letter addressed to Odisha's ST & SC Development, Minorities & Backwards Classes Welfare Department, as well as the collector and SP of Mayurbhanj, the NCST said it has decided to investigate the matter under powers conferred on it by Article 338A of the Constitution.
"You are hereby requested to submit the facts and information, along with action taken on the said allegations/matters, within seven days of receipt of this notice, either by post or in person or by any other means of communication," NCST director P Kalyan Reddy said in the letter dated April 26.
The commission said that if no reply was received within the stipulated period, it could exercise powers of a civil court under Article 338A and issue a summons for appearance before it, either in person or through an authorised representative.
Commission for Scheduled Tribes intervenes
Earlier, BJD leader Priyabrat Majhi had sought the NCST's intervention in the matter. The NHRC on April 24 issued notices to the chief secretary, the collector and the SP of Mayurbhanj, seeking a detailed report within two weeks on the death of the girl and the illness of over 100 students after they reportedly ate stale food on April 14.
The rights panel said that if media reports were accurate, the matter raised serious concerns of human rights violations. It also sought details on the status of the investigation and the health condition of the affected students.
Around 67 students in serious condition were shifted to Baripada Medical College and Hospital, while 41 others were admitted to a community health centre. A 12-year-old girl student also died. They allegedly consumed stale 'pakhala' (fermented rice), 'saga bhaja' (fried green leaves) and 'aloo bharta' (mashed potato) at the hostel of the school, meant for SC and ST students.
Chief Minister Mohan Charan Majhi has ordered an inquiry by the Revenue Divisional Commissioner, while the school headmaster has been suspended.
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.
Quick Watch
]Next Story
]Featured News
]- SNU Chennai VC: Mechanical, civil, chemical engineering still deliver; demand for BTech cybersecurity on rise
- ‘Bureaucratic hurdle’: KCET rank list not updated after CBSE re-evaluation, affects admission, says student
- How Bihar Engineering University is powering through violence, floods, placement woes
- As tighter immigration norms rub shine off UK, US for Indian MBBS grads, Australia, Germany, Middle East gain
- Maharashtra’s new Class 6 social science textbook drops caste system, meat diet; paints rosy Vedic past
- IIIT Allahabad fines B.Techs who accept campus placement offers and then take other jobs, allege students
- Tamil Nadu: Chennai LKG fees highest in state; fee details of thousands of TN private schools public
- GMR Aero Technic’s aviation course produces professionals airlines can deploy from day one: President
- No more ‘half-baked doctors’: NMC scraps 2-year PG medical diplomas; over 3,300 seats will go to MD, MS
- MBBS interns seek uniform stipend policy as amounts vary wildly and private medical colleges underpay