In Yoga Federation of India vs. Union of India &Ors., the Delhi High Court quashed the government’s recognition of Yogasana Bharat (Respondent No. 3) as the National Sports Federation (NSF) for the sport of Yogasana. Justice Purushaindra Kumar Kaurav ruled that the initial 2020 recognition was void ab initio because the organization was fundamentally ineligible under the mandatory criteria of the National Sports Development Code of India, 2011, having existed for only three months and lacking any state affiliations or track record of national championships. The Court found that the Ministry of Youth Affairs and Sports had abdicated its statutory duty by acting solely on the recommendation of the Ministry of AYUSH without independent verification. While the Court set aside the recognition and all subsequent renewals, it protected the honors and achievements of athletes who participated in competitions during the interim period and directed the Ministry to initiate a fresh, lawful recognition process within 60 days.
1. Challenge to NSF Recognition
The petitioner, established in 1974 with a long-standing institutional presence in competitive yoga, challenged a November 2020 letter granting NSF status to Yogasana Bharat. The petitioner argued that while its own application had been pending for years, the Ministry suddenly recognized a three-month-old body that failed nearly every mandatory eligibility requirement.
2. Mandatory Eligibility Deficits
The Court found that at the time of recognition, Yogasana Bharat failed three critical “substantive conditions precedent” required by the Sports Code:
- Duration of Existence: The Code requires three years of active existence; Yogasana Bharat had existed for only three months.
- State Affiliations: The Code requires units in at least two-thirds of States/UTs; Yogasana Bharat had none.
- National Championships: The Code requires having conducted national championships for three consecutive years; Yogasana Bharat had conducted none.
3. Abdication of Executive Discretion
The Court highlighted that the Ministry of Youth Affairs and Sports is the exclusive authority for recognizing NSFs under the Allocation of Business Rules. However, the Ministry’s recognition letter admitted the decision was made “on recommendation of the Ministry of AYUSH”. The Court ruled this was a surrender of independent adjudication, as the Sports Ministry acted as a “rubber stamp” for another department whose domain is wellness rather than competitive sport.
4. Failure of the “Relaxation Clause” and Natural Justice
- Prospective Application: The government attempted to justify the recognition using a 2021 “Relaxation Clause.” The Court rejected this, holding that a power introduced in February 2021 cannot retrospectively validate an illegal act committed in November 2020.
- Speaking Order Flaws: A 2021 speaking order meant to re-examine the recognition was found to have violated natural justice by relying on an undisclosed RTI document to disqualify the petitioner without giving them a chance to respond.
5. Consequences for Renewals and Athletes
- Derivative Orders: The annual renewals issued from 2022 to 2025 were quashed as they were “tributaries” of a poisoned source; an illegal foundational recognition cannot be cured by the mere passage of time or repetitive renewals.
- Protection of Third Parties: Recognizing the hard work of athletes, the Court directed that all medals, titles, and rankings conferred under Yogasana Bharat’s aegis during its period of recognition remain valid and undisturbed.
6. Final Directives
The Court ordered the Ministry of Youth Affairs and Sports to issue a public notice within 60 days inviting applications from all eligible bodies to conduct a fresh, independent, and lawful recognition exercise for the sport of Yogasana. It clarified that the petitioner is not automatically entitled to recognition, as that remains an executive determination to be made in the new exercise.
2026 DHC 5515
Yoga Federation of India vs. Union of India &Ors.(D.O.J. 09.07.2026)




