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Uttarakhand Scholarship Scam: Digital Verification Probe in Alleged ₹500 Crore Fraud

SIT examines digital scholarship records, beneficiary identities and banking transactions amid allegations of large-scale misuse of government scholarship funds.
July 14, 2026 by
Uttarakhand Scholarship Scam: Digital Verification Probe in Alleged ₹500 Crore Fraud
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The Special Investigation Team (SIT) has intensified its investigation into alleged irregularities in scholarship schemes in Uttarakhand, with preliminary estimates suggesting the suspected fraud could exceed ₹500 crore.

Investigators are examining allegations involving fake admissions, fabricated academic records, suspicious bank accounts and the alleged diversion of government scholarship funds.

The investigation includes detailed verification of records available on the National Scholarship Portal (NSP) along with banking and beneficiary data.

Investigation Follows Earlier Scholarship Scam

The latest probe follows an earlier scholarship scam investigated in Uttarakhand.

According to investigators:

  • Alleged irregularities between the 2011–12 and 2016–17 academic sessions resulted in:

    • 156 criminal cases
    • 98 arrests

Fresh allegations have now emerged concerning the Minority Scholarship Scheme, prompting renewed scrutiny of government-funded welfare programmes.

Fake Admissions and Academic Records Under Scanner

Investigators suspect that several private educational institutions may have obtained scholarship funds by allegedly creating:

  • Fake student admissions
  • Fabricated attendance registers
  • False academic records
  • Incorrect fee records
  • Fictitious beneficiary details

Authorities are verifying whether scholarship amounts were actually disbursed to genuine students.

Digital and Banking Records Being Verified

The SIT is examining:

  • National Scholarship Portal data
  • Admission registers
  • Attendance records
  • Fee payment records
  • Scholarship sanction details
  • Bank accounts
  • Aadhaar-linked information
  • Academic documentation

These records will help determine whether scholarship claims matched genuine educational activity.

Institutional Role Also Being Examined

Investigators are also examining the role of:

  • Private educational institutions
  • Trustees
  • College managements
  • Principals
  • Employees
  • Social Welfare Department officials

The objective is to determine whether administrative lapses or deliberate actions enabled the alleged misuse of government funds.

Earlier ED Investigation

The Enforcement Directorate (ED) had previously examined money laundering aspects of the broader scholarship matter under the Prevention of Money Laundering Act (PMLA).

According to investigators, properties linked to certain accused had also been attached during earlier proceedings.

Financial transactions and beneficiary trails continue to be reviewed as part of the present investigation.

Beneficiary Addresses Raise Questions

One significant finding under examination is that numerous scholarship beneficiaries reportedly have permanent addresses outside Uttarakhand, including locations such as:

  • Saharanpur
  • Muzaffarnagar
  • Other districts of Uttar Pradesh

Authorities are verifying:

  • Aadhaar records
  • Residential addresses
  • Admission details
  • Academic history
  • Bank accounts

Investigators are examining whether some beneficiaries existed only on paper for scholarship purposes.

Digital Verification to Be Matched With Physical Records

The next stage of the investigation involves comparing digital records with institutional documents.

Officials will verify:

  • Physical attendance
  • Examination records
  • Fee receipts
  • Identity documents
  • Student existence
  • Institutional registers

The combination of digital analytics and physical verification is expected to help identify fake beneficiaries and any organised network.

Multiple Institutions Under Examination

Several educational institutions have come under scrutiny during the investigation.

Authorities are independently examining scholarship claims submitted by each institution based on available documentary and digital evidence.

No conclusions regarding their liability have been reached at this stage.

Why Scholarship Verification Matters

Scholarship schemes operate through Direct Benefit Transfer (DBT) mechanisms designed to support eligible students.

Where fake beneficiaries or fabricated admissions are created, the consequences include:

  • Diversion of public funds
  • Loss of educational opportunities for genuine students
  • Financial losses to government
  • Weakening of welfare programmes
  • Reduced public trust

Stronger Controls Can Reduce Risk

Experts recommend strengthening scholarship systems through:

  • Aadhaar-based authentication
  • Real-time admission verification
  • AI-driven anomaly detection
  • Digital attendance validation
  • Institutional audits
  • Cross-verification of beneficiary data
  • Automated banking analytics
  • Periodic physical inspections

Such controls can help detect suspicious claims before government funds are released.

Investigation Continues

The SIT investigation remains ongoing.

Authorities have stated that the actual extent of the alleged irregularities and the role of individuals or institutions will become clear only after completion of:

  • Digital verification
  • Banking analysis
  • Documentary examination
  • Beneficiary validation
  • Institutional inspections

Further legal action will depend upon the evidence collected.

Shunyatax Global Insight

Shunyatax Global says that scholarship programmes funded through public money require continuous digital verification from admission to final payment. Integrating beneficiary identity, attendance, academic progression and banking records into a single verification framework can significantly reduce the risk of fake admissions and fraudulent scholarship claims while ensuring that financial assistance reaches deserving students.

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