Sachin Pilot demands probe into Rajasthan's Rs 503 cr school repair fund
Synopsis
Key Takeaways
Congress leader and party general secretary Sachin Pilot on Monday, July 6, 2026, demanded a high-level investigation into the alleged misuse of a Rs 503 crore fund allocated by the Rajasthan BJP government for repairing dilapidated government school buildings across the state, warning that financial irregularities in the scheme pose a direct threat to the safety of thousands of children and school staff.
Context
Pilot's intervention follows media reports alleging that payments were released for repair work at several government schools even though the work was not completed. The allegations come more than a year after the Rajasthan government allocated funds specifically to prevent a repeat of the tragedy at Piplodi, Jhalawar, where a government school roof collapse had claimed the lives of several young students.
In his post, Pilot wrote: 'यदि 503 करोड़ रुपये के फंड में कहीं भ्रष्टाचार, लापरवाही या फर्जीवाड़ा हुआ है, तो इसकी उच्च स्तरीय जांच होनी चाहिए' ('If there has been corruption, negligence, or fraud anywhere in the Rs 503 crore fund, a high-level inquiry must be conducted and strict action taken against the guilty').
Policy Backdrop
The Rs 503 crore allocation was a direct policy response to the Piplodi, Jhalawar school roof collapse, which had triggered public outrage and political pressure on the state administration to audit and repair unsafe school infrastructure statewide. The fund was intended to cover repairs and structural safety upgrades across government schools in Rajasthan.
Allegations of incomplete work paired with full payment disbursement — if verified — would constitute a significant financial irregularity in a public welfare programme. School infrastructure safety has drawn periodic scrutiny across multiple Indian states, with similar patterns of budget outlays failing to translate into verified physical improvements recurring in the education sector.
Stakeholders and Impact
At the centre of the controversy are thousands of schoolchildren, teachers, and non-teaching staff who attend or work in government school buildings that were deemed unsafe. Pilot argued that weak infrastructure directly erodes parental confidence in the public school system, with long-term consequences for enrolment and learning outcomes.
Parents and civil society groups in Rajasthan have consistently raised concerns about the physical condition of government school buildings, particularly in rural and semi-urban areas. If the media claims of fake or incomplete repair work are substantiated, accountability would extend from contractors to supervising officials and the administrative chain responsible for certifying completed works.
What's Next
Pilot has called for the fixing of responsibility and strict action against those found guilty, signalling that the Congress is likely to press the issue in the Rajasthan Legislative Assembly and in the public domain. The demand for a high-level inquiry puts pressure on the BJP state government to either order an independent audit of the fund's utilisation or defend the expenditure with documented evidence of completed repairs.
With school safety remaining a politically and socially sensitive issue after the Piplodi tragedy, the BJP administration's response — or lack of one — will be closely watched by opposition parties, parents' groups, and education activists across the state. Any formal inquiry could set a precedent for third-party verification of infrastructure spending in government school programmes in Rajasthan.