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MP: Denied Bus Over Fees, Class 5 Girl Blocks School Vehicle in Jabalpur, Locals Intervene

A 10-year-old's desperate sit-in protest against being denied school bus access due to family debts ignites debate on child rights and education equity in Madhya Pradesh.

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In Jabalpur, a Class 5 girl was denied school bus boarding over unpaid fees and staged a tearful sit-in protest, blocking the vehicle and igniting outrage over child rights.

On December 23, 2025, in Madhya Pradesh’s Jabalpur, 10-year-old Bhumi Sahu, a Class 5 student at Bright Public School, was barred from boarding the school bus due to her family’s outstanding fees.

Devastated, she sat in front of the moving bus in Madan Mahal area, halting it for 20 minutes until locals intervened. The school defended the decision citing financial dues, while Bhumi’s daily wage earner father pleaded financial hardship; a viral video drew over 100,000 views.

District education officials promised swift investigation, highlighting tensions between school policies and child rights under the Right to Education Act.

The Heartbreaking Stand-Off

Eyewitnesses captured the raw emotion of the scene outside Bright Public School. Bhumi, dressed in her crisp school uniform, collapsed to the ground in tears as the bus driver refused her entry, enforcing a strict no-payment, no-service rule.

“Please let me go to school; I want to study,” she reportedly sobbed, her small frame blocking the bus’s path amid honking and gathering crowds. Passersby, including nearby shopkeepers, rushed to her aid, convincing the driver to pause while her father, Rajesh Sahu, arrived breathless from work.

Rajesh, a 35-year-old construction labourer earning ₹500-600 daily, explained their plight: “We’ve paid partial fees, but rising costs after COVID left us struggling.

Denying her the bus feels like punishing the child for our poverty.” School principal Ritu Shukla responded cautiously, stating, “Fees sustain bus operations and teacher salaries; we can’t compromise sustainability.”

The one-minute video, shared on social media, exploded with hashtags like #EducationForAll, amassing comments from netizens decrying the “inhumanity” and tagging education minister Rao Uday Pratap Singh.

Roots in Financial Strain and Policy Gaps

Bhumi’s protest isn’t isolated. Madhya Pradesh has seen a surge in fee-related disputes in private schools, with over 1,200 complaints logged in the state education department from January to November 2025 alone-a 40% rise from 2024, per official data.

Post-pandemic inflation has hiked school fees by 15-20% annually, while many families grapple with stagnant wages. In Jabalpur district, nearly 30% of students in unaided schools rely on shared buses, yet enforcement of the Right to Education (RTE) Act, 2009-which mandates non-discrimination and free facilities for disadvantaged children-remains patchy.

The state issued advisory No. F-7-18/2024/KA-NI on March 15, 2024, explicitly barring schools from denying transport or entry over fees. Yet private institutions argue operational costs, with bus maintenance alone costing ₹2-3 lakh yearly per vehicle.

Bhumi’s family had approached the school for instalments twice before, but no waivers were granted. Following the viral clip, District Education Officer Sanjay Tiwari visited the school on December 23 evening, assuring, “No child should face such humiliation. We’ve ordered a probe, and counselling for fee relief will be provided.”

Wider Echoes Across India

Similar incidents underscore systemic pressures. In October 2025, a Class 6 boy in Bhopal was publicly shamed over dues, prompting a ₹50,000 fine on the school by the state commissioner.

Nationally, the National Commission for Protection of Child Rights (NCPCR) reported 5,600 education access complaints in 2024-25, many tied to fees amid 22% private school enrolment growth.

Advocacy groups like Pratham Education Foundation highlight how such barriers exacerbate dropout rates—8.2% for primary students in Madhya Pradesh, per UDISE+ 2024-25 data-disproportionately hitting girls from low-income homes.

Bhumi’s story revives calls for the proposed Fee Regulation Bill, stalled in the state assembly, which could cap hikes at 5% annually.

Community Backlash and Road to Resolution

Social media erupted with support: Bollywood actor Sonu Sood tweeted, “Education is a right, not a privilege-schools, show some heart.” Local NGOs offered to cover Bhumi’s fees temporarily, while the school’s parent-teacher association demanded a policy review.

By December 24 morning, the family confirmed Bhumi attended classes via an alternative route arranged by neighbours. Officials hinted at potential derecognition if violations persist, signalling accountability.

The Logical Indian’s Perspective

The Logical Indian condemns shaming tactics that scar young minds, urging schools to embrace empathy through scholarships, flexible payments, and community partnerships-fostering harmony over hardship.

True progress demands dialogue between educators and families, ensuring education unites rather than divides.

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