Chandigarh, July 24 -- Even as the Supreme Court has pulled up the UT administration for the prolonged delay in implementing the Other Backward Classes (OBC) quota in educational institutions in its jurisdiction, Panjab University (PU) is unlikely to implement OBC reservation for the 2025-26 session. As per the admission handbook of 2025, PU offers 5% reservation to backward classes, but not the 27% reservation for OBC students, mandated as per central rules. Citing a judgment by the Punjab and Haryana high court, PU vice-chancellor Renu Vig clarified that PU was not a central institute and, thus, didn't need to follow these reservation norms. In August 2024, the bench of high court chief justice Sheel Nagu and justice Vikas Suri had observed that PU did not come within the ambit of the term "Central Educational Institution (CEI)" as defined under Section 2(d) of the CEI Act, 2006, and reservation in terms of Section 3 of the Act cannot be forced upon it. In the 2000s also, the university had implemented OBC reservation as per central rules and asked University Grants Commission (UGC) for funds for the extra seats. However, UGC did not allow this. In a letter in 2011, UGC had claimed that the central policy applied only to centrally funded institutions and PU in its special status, as an inter-state body corporate, didn't qualify for this. PU had also prepared a proposal for 27% OBC reservation in faculty recruitment in May 2024, but it remains pending with the Union ministry of education, as claimed by PU officials. While the Punjab government's policy specifies 12% OBC reservation, the central policy mandates a 27% quota, leaving PU torn between which policy to implement. A proposal was prepared in May 2024 by a committee, recommending 27% seats to be set aside for OBC candidates, out of which 12% will be solely for OBC candidates from Punjab. There has been no update since then, even as student parties, including Sath and Students For Society , have held protests regarding this. Some faculty members have also protested against PU on this issue. Meanwhile, with regards to college admissions, officials of the UT higher education department said the social welfare department will have to notify a policy for implementation. While new admissions will be done as per the new rules on OBC reservation, the department will seek legal opinion on how to accommodate students who have already claimed seats for the 2025-26 session, especially for the UG courses....