Accused individuals in the Bengaluru Rape case

Bengaluru College Horror: Physics, Biology Lecturers Among Three Booked for Raping Student

by · TFIPOST.com

A horrifying case has emerged from Bengaluru  two college lecturers and their friend allegedly gang‑raped and blackmailed a young student repeatedly. This atrocity unfolded in Congress‑ruled Karnataka, where the Chief Minister and Deputy Chief Minister are more focused on internal power struggles and campaigning in Delhi than on securing law and order at home. It raises serious questions about the state’s ability to protect students, especially with so many high‑profile campus crimes already reported in 2025. While the political elite bicker, women continue to suffer on university grounds campuses have become breeding grounds for violence under the government’s watch.

The Case: Betrayal by Educators

A private college in Bengaluru became the site of a nightmare for one of its female students. According to the police complaint, Physics lecturer Narendra first gained the student’s trust under the guise of sharing academic notes. Through persistent messaging and a false sense of friendship, he lured her to Anoop’s Bengaluru apartment, where he allegedly raped her and threatened severe consequences if she spoke up.

Shortly afterwards, Biology lecturer Sandeep intervened. Claiming to possess compromising recordings of the assault, he blackmailed the student and sexually assaulted her in the same apartment. The horror culminated when Anoop  the friend  reportedly threatened her with CCTV footage of her entering his room before committing the final assault.

Traumatised and isolated, the student did not disclose the abuse until her parents visited more than a month later. They immediately approached the Karnataka State Women’s Commission and filed a formal complaint at Marathahalli Police Station. On July 5, investigators arrested all three accused and presented them before court, acting swiftly upon the Commission’s directions.

Rape in Bengaluru: A Rising Pattern

This case is not isolated. Bengaluru has witnessed multiple campus rape cases in 2025 alone, spotlighting a disturbing pattern:

  • In March, a university student reported being sexually assaulted by a senior inside campus grounds. The alleged culprit was a fellow student in a position of trust.
  • In May, another incident surfaced involving a college administrator accused of raping a student under the guise of career counselling.

Now, with lecturers exploiting their authority at a private college, the city is confronting a chilling trend: classrooms and staff quarters are becoming sites of abuse. These incidents occur with alarming frequency, eroding students’ faith in institutional safety and exposing gaps in regulatory vigilance.

Campus Lawlessness: From Bengaluru to Kolkata

Bengaluru’s crimes echo a similarly shocking incident at a prominent Kolkata law college just weeks ago — when a group of students allegedly gang‑raped a junior during a campus event. Despite protests and outrage, authorities scrambled to act, and the institution delayed reporting the crime.

Both incidents reveal a wspike in campus lawlessness, driven by a toxic mix of youth entitlement, weak oversight, and fragmented administration. Students entrusted with higher education are becoming perpetrators rather than scholars. Whether in Karnataka or West Bengal, campuses have become free of accountability, turning into zones of unchecked predation.

Political Inaction and Law Enforcement Failure

These deeply disturbing cases expose more than individual criminality they highlight systemic failures. Karnataka, under Congress rule, continues to grapple with shoddy law enforcement. Recent surrenders of police stations as political centers and negligible attention to public safety are symptomatic of a governance crisis.

Both the Bengaluru incident and Kolkata law college case demonstrate alarming law-and-order deficits campuses operate like lawless zones, immune to oversight. The question now arises: how many more such stories must surface before authorities prioritize student safety over party tussles and internal politicking?

Reclaiming Campus Safety

This brutal case in Bengaluru and another in Kolkata demand urgent, structural reforms. Law enforcement agencies must audit college and university safety protocols, enforce strict accountability for staff and administrators, and ensure transparent reporting of alleged crimes. College administrations should set up independent grievance cells with government oversight. Political leaders must refocus on governance, not just vote-bank politics or personal ambitions.

Campuses ought to be sanctuaries of learning, not zones of terror. Protecting students must take precedence over political egos and campaigns. Unless urgent action is taken, trust in India’s educational institutions will continue to erode, wrought not by external threats, but by those who are supposed to guide and teach.