Amity University student slapped repeatedly by classmates — what happened, why it matters, and what comes next
A disturbing video from Amity University’s Lucknow campus has sparked outrage online after showing a law student being slapped repeatedly by classmates inside a vehicle. The footage — which surfaced in early September 2025 — prompted a police complaint and an FIR, and has reopened urgent questions about campus safety, bullying, and the university’s duty of care.
What the video shows (and why reports differ)
The clip circulating on social media shows a second-year BA LLB student identified in news reports as Shikhar Mukesh Kesarwani being struck multiple times while inside a parked car on campus. Different outlets report slightly different counts: some say the student was slapped about 26 times in roughly 90 seconds, while others say the number ranged from 25–60, depending on how the blows were tallied from the video. These discrepancies are common when incidents are reconstructed from short viral videos.
Who has been named and what the police say
According to police records and media reporting, an FIR has been registered after the victim’s father lodged a complaint. Some reports list several students named in the complaint — including Ayush Yadav, Jahnvi Mishra, Milay Banerjee, Vivek Singh and Aryaman Shukla — though details and charges are still being investigated and may be updated as the case progresses. Authorities have said the viral footage formed the basis for action and that investigators are looking into the circumstances.
Where and when it allegedly happened

Multiple outlets state the incident took place on August 26, 2025, inside the university parking area at the Lucknow campus of Amity University. The video was posted and recirculated days or weeks later, which led to the public outcry once it reached wider audiences.
Why this matters: bullying, ragging and campus culture
This is not only a single act of violence; it highlights ongoing concerns about ragging, peer intimidation and a campus culture that can sometimes allow harassment to go unchecked. Even where incidents are framed as “jokes” or “discipline,” they can inflict real psychological and physical harm, interfere with study, and create long-term trauma for victims.
Universities have both legal and ethical obligations to protect students. A viral assault raises immediate questions: Were staff nearby? Did bystanders intervene or ignore the assault? Did surveillance footage exist that could aid the investigation? Answering these questions is essential to preventing repeats. Several reports note that, at the time of publication, Amity University had not issued a detailed public statement addressing the specific incident.
What victims and families should do (practical steps)
If you or someone you know experiences campus violence, consider these steps:
- Seek immediate medical attention — even if injuries appear minor, get documented medical reports.
- Preserve evidence — save any video or audio files, screenshots, messages and eyewitness contacts.
- File a police complaint — an FIR is the formal way to trigger criminal investigation and preserves legal options.
- Notify the university — report the incident to the anti-ragging cell, dean of students or campus security in writing.
- Get legal advice — consult a lawyer experienced in criminal or campus law to understand rights and remedies.
- Use support services — counseling and mental-health services (on- or off-campus) can help manage trauma.
Those steps reflect best practice for any campus assault and are consistent with what the victim’s family reportedly pursued in this case.
What universities and administrators must do
When an incident like this surfaces, immediate and transparent action is crucial:
- Launch a prompt internal inquiry and cooperate fully with police.
- Place accused students on interim suspension if the campus code permits, pending investigation.
- Make counseling available to the victim and to other students affected by the footage.
- Review anti-ragging and grievance redressal mechanisms so reporting is simple, confidential and effective.
- Communicate clearly with the campus community about safety measures and ongoing steps — silence breeds mistrust.
Higher education institutions must treat bullying and assault as safety issues, not merely disciplinary infractions, and act accordingly.
Legal and reputational consequences
An FIR and pending police investigation mean the matter can move into the criminal justice system. Depending on charges and findings, accused students could face criminal prosecution as well as disciplinary action under university rules. For the university, failure to respond adequately risks reputational harm and potential legal scrutiny over negligence in ensuring student safety. Media coverage — which already varies in how many times the student was struck — will continue influencing public perception, so accurate, transparent statements from authorities and the university are important.
How the campus community can help prevent similar incidents
Prevention requires cultural and structural work:
- Regular, mandatory anti-ragging workshops and bystander intervention training.
- Easy, anonymous reporting channels for harassment.
- Timely disciplinary procedures with clear timelines.
- Active student-led peer support and mediation programs.
- Visible enforcement of campus codes to show that intimidation will not be tolerated.
Change is incremental, but consistent enforcement and education reduce the likelihood of repeat incidents.
Final takeaways for readers
The viral video from Amity University is a painful reminder that campus safety cannot be taken for granted. While facts (such as the exact number of slaps) vary across reports, the core issue is the same: a student was visibly assaulted on campus, an FIR has been filed, and the incident demands both legal accountability and institutional reform. If you are a student, parent, or staff member at any university, this case should prompt honest conversations about prevention, reporting, and support systems that protect vulnerable students.
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