Amid considerations raised in the course of the latest Telangana Assembly Budget session over the hole between allocations and precise spending on Minorities Welfare, official paperwork reveal that lower than 50% of the earmarked funds had been utilised.
A Right to Information request filed by Kareem Ansari, an activist with the portal youRTI.in, said that the intention was to trace the efficiency of presidency schemes throughout departments.
According to the knowledge sought, together with per-head allocation, fund releases and precise expenditure, the Minorities Welfare Department, which was allotted ₹3,585.03 crore in FY 2025-26, spent solely ₹1,703.30 crore, or 47.5% of the whole.
One space that witnessed obviously low spending was training. A main instance is the disbursal of funds for the Reimbursement of Tuition Fee (RTF) scheme, underneath which the federal government extends monetary help to varsity college students by paying their charges. While the allocation and launch had been ₹300 crore every, solely ₹68.88 crore was spent.
The knowledge reveals that no funds had been spent on the pre-matric (GoI) scholarship scheme, which had an allocation of ₹1.73 crore. While the federal government dragged its ft on these schemes, there was a silver lining within the type of the Chief Minister’s Overseas Scholarship, which covers airfare and tuition in international universities. The scheme noticed an expenditure of ₹172.27 crore towards an allocation of ₹130 crore. However, the variety of beneficiaries underneath this scheme is considerably smaller in comparison with these underneath RTF.
While ₹4 crore was allotted for examine circles, solely ₹3 lakh was spent. The Centre for Educational Development of Minorities, with Osmania University as the nodal company, was allotted ₹4 crore however recorded an expenditure of ₹63 lakh. The Telangana Minorities Residential Educational Institutions Society was allotted a price range of round ₹995 crore, however the expenditure was round ₹850 crore.
“In the current financial year, the government reduced the RTF budget by ₹200 crore. We are now seeing very low spending in the previous year,” stated Mohammed Faraz Ahmed, State president of the Students Islamic Organisation.
He stated that the latest interim orders of the High Court allowing personal engineering schools to gather charges immediately from college students in case the federal government fails to reimburse them may have a huge effect. “The government should appeal against this order,” he stated.
Published – April 06, 2026 09:25 pm IST


