Bengaluru boy, 12, dies at residential school; family alleges teacher assault

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Bengaluru boy, 12, dies at residential school; family alleges teacher assault

Synopsis

A 12-year-old boy died at a Bengaluru residential school on 8 July under circumstances his family refuses to accept as natural. Allegations of iron-rod beatings, a missing teacher, and CCTV cameras with severed wires have turned a school death into a potential crime scene — and a test of Karnataka's child protection safeguards.

Key Takeaways

Gurukiran , a 12-year-old Class 6 student , died at a residential school in Kadayarappanahalli, Bengaluru North Taluk on 8 July .
The school claims he collapsed while jogging ; his family alleges he was beaten with iron rods and sticks by the physical education teacher.
Relatives allege that CCTV cameras in the school were removed and wires cut, with no footage made available.
The family was reportedly initially denied access to the child's body at the hospital.
Police from Bagalur Police Station have launched an investigation; the school had not responded to allegations at the time of reporting.

A 12-year-old student named Gurukiran died under suspicious circumstances at a residential school in Bengaluru on Wednesday, 8 July, sparking allegations of physical assault by teachers and triggering protests by his family outside the school premises. The incident has prompted a police investigation into the exact cause of death.

What Happened at the School

Gurukiran, a Class 6 student at a prominent residential school in Kadayarappanahalli village, Bengaluru North Taluk, was the son of Raghavendra, a resident of Subedarpalya. According to the school management, the boy collapsed while jogging on the campus early in the morning. School authorities reportedly informed his parents by phone at around 6 a.m., stating he had fallen ill and been taken to hospital. By the time the family arrived, Gurukiran had died.

The family, however, has rejected this account. Gurukiran's father, Raghavendra, told reporters: 'My son was admitted to this school when he was studying in Class 5. The school claims that he collapsed while jogging this morning. But when we reached the hospital, we found him dead. I suspect something happened inside the school. The teachers might have assaulted him or done something to him.'

Assault Allegations and CCTV Controversy

Raghavendra further alleged that another student had told the family that Gurukiran was beaten with an iron rod while in the hostel. He specifically named the physical education teacher as the alleged perpetrator and claimed that police were shielding the accused. He also noted that Gurukiran had never previously complained of harassment or health problems during visits home.

A relative, Yashasvini, alleged that the family was initially barred from viewing the child's body at the hospital, and that school staff had moved him to a different facility without informing them. When the family sought CCTV footage from the jogging area and the room where Gurukiran was reportedly taken after collapsing, the school management claimed the cameras were damaged and the footage was unavailable.

Yashasvini alleged otherwise: 'We found that the CCTV cameras had been removed and the wires had been cut. We suspect foul play. Other students have also told us that children are beaten in the school.' The family also questioned the school's claim that Gurukiran had completed two rounds of jogging before collapsing on the third.

Protests and Tension at the School

Following the death, Gurukiran's parents and relatives staged a protest outside the residential school, demanding a thorough investigation and accountability from the management. Tension escalated when angry family members allegedly assaulted the physical education teacher in the presence of police personnel. Officers from Bagalur Police Station intervened and rescued the teacher from the crowd.

Notably, the school had not responded to the allegations at the time of reporting, and calls to the school went unanswered.

Investigation Underway

Police have launched a formal investigation to determine the exact cause of Gurukiran's death. The school's version — that the boy suffered a medical episode during morning exercise — remains unverified, and the family's allegations of assault and evidence tampering are being examined. A post-mortem examination is expected to provide critical clarity. The case has drawn attention to questions of child safety and institutional accountability in residential schools across Karnataka.

Point of View

But for what the school's conduct suggests. Damaged or missing CCTV footage, an initial refusal to let parents see their child's body, and unanswered phones are not the hallmarks of an institution with nothing to hide. Residential schools in India operate with limited external oversight, and this case exposes a structural gap: when a child dies inside a boarding facility, the institution controls the first hours of evidence. Karnataka's child rights machinery will face scrutiny over whether it has the tools — and the will — to pierce that institutional shield.
NationPress
8 Jul 2026

Frequently Asked Questions

Who was Gurukiran and where did he study?
Gurukiran was a 12-year-old Class 6 student at a residential school in Kadayarappanahalli village, Bengaluru North Taluk. He was the son of Raghavendra, a resident of Subedarpalya in Bengaluru.
What does the school say happened to Gurukiran?
The school management claims Gurukiran collapsed while jogging on the campus early on the morning of 8 July. They say he completed two rounds before collapsing on the third, and that he was taken to hospital after his pulse rate dropped.
What is the family alleging?
The family alleges that Gurukiran was physically assaulted by the school's physical education teacher using iron rods and sticks. They also claim CCTV cameras were removed and wires cut to destroy evidence, and that they were initially denied access to the child's body at the hospital.
Have police made any arrests?
As of the time of reporting, no arrests had been made. Police from Bagalur Police Station have launched an investigation to determine the exact cause of death. The physical education teacher was reportedly rescued from an agitated crowd by police at the school.
Why is the CCTV footage significant in this case?
The family requested CCTV footage from the jogging area and the room where Gurukiran was taken after collapsing. The school claimed the cameras were damaged and footage unavailable, but relatives allege the cameras had been physically removed and wires cut — raising suspicions of evidence tampering that investigators are expected to examine.
Nation Press
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