ABVP wins all 6 posts in Hyderabad Central University students’ union elections; check winners list

Hyderabad: The Akhil Bharatiya Vidyarthi Parishad (ABVP) has achieved a landmark win in the Hyderabad Central University (HCU) students’ union elections by winning all six posts. This clean sweep comes after a gap of seven years and adds to the organization’s series of victories across campuses in Assam, Guwahati, Himachal, Patna, Punjab, and Delhi University earlier this year. The outcome highlights the growing support for ABVP among students across the country.

Hyderabad Central University students’ union polls: Winners list

  • President: Siva Palepu (PhD, Animal Biology)
  • Vice President: Debendra (PhD, Linguistics)
  • General Secretary: Shruti Priya (PhD, Economics)
  • Joint Secretary: Saurabh Shukla (MBA)
  • Cultural Secretary: Venus (IMA, Language Sciences)
  • Sports Secretary: Jwala (PhD, Hindi)

ABVP’s promises

According to ABVP, this mandate reflects the combined force of national sentiment and student aspirations. It credits the victory to the dedicated work of ABVP activists, the leadership’s planning, and the confidence shown by students in shaping the campus’s future. The student union added that the result has sent a strong signal against groups accused of promoting unrest, violence, or divisive politics.

ABVP has celebrated this win with a pledge to work harder for the development of both academic and cultural life at HCU. The organization says it will continue to follow its guiding principle: “Students’ Power – Nation’s Power.”

Commenting on the victory, ABVP’s National General Secretary Dr. Virendra Singh Solanki said, “This result shows how student power can defeat misleading campaigns by groups that treat universities as their personal property. It is the outcome of the continuous hard work of ABVP members and the clear vision of students who stand by national ideals. After earlier wins in Patna, Assam, Guwahati, Uttarakhand, Punjab, and Delhi, this result in Hyderabad proves that nationalist thinking among students is growing stronger. It also leaves little space for those who depend on anti-national slogans and disruptive politics.”