India’s Modi criticised for exam irregularities amid lack of jobs

India’s Modi criticised for exam irregularities amid lack of jobs
India’s Modi criticised for exam irregularities amid lack of jobs

Hello and welcome to the details of India’s Modi criticised for exam irregularities amid lack of jobs and now with the details

Nevin Al Sukari - Sana'a - School children stand in a queue to meet Indian Prime Minister Narendra Modi on the day of Modi's visit on International Yoga Day at Sher-i-Kashmir International Conference Centre in Srinagar June 20, 2024. — Reuters pic

PRAYAGRAJ (India), June 20 — India’s opposition parties and the country’s students today hit out at the new government of Prime Minister Narendra Modi for irregularities in recent government-run tests for college admissions and government teaching jobs.

Modi surprisingly lost a parliamentary majority in a general election that ended this month partly because of joblessness, especially among the youth, exacerbated by frequent leaks of test papers for government jobs that are coveted by many Indians for the security.

Having to rely on fickle allies to run his third government, Modi’s Bharatiya Janata Party next faces local elections in the states of Haryana and Maharashtra where it did badly in the national vote.

The government late on Wednesday cancelled an examination done earlier this week for university and college teachers as well as doctorate courses, based on early inputs from a government cyber-crime analysis team that the “integrity of the aforesaid examination may have been compromised”. It said in a statement the federal Central Bureau of Investigation would probe the matter.

Advertisement

The Ministry of Education said it had also sought a report from police into “certain irregularities alleged” in running another test for admission in undergraduate medical programmes in May.

The main opposition Congress party, on a high after its better-than-expected election result, said the “Modi government has ruined the country’s education and recruitment system”.

“There is huge pressure on our students. There is large-scale unemployment in the country,” Rahul Gandhi, Congress’ highest profile leader, told a news conference on Thursday.

Advertisement

“The youngsters in India have no way through. The youth of India have nowhere to go. It’s a profound national crisis!”

Other opposition parties also criticised the government.

India’s unemployment among people aged between 15 and 24 was 18% last year, according to estimates from the International Labour Organisation, higher than neighbours such as Bangladesh and Pakistan. Overall, India’s unemployment currently is 8.5 per cent, according to the private think-tank Centre for Monitoring Indian Economy, compared with around 6 per centbefore the Covid-19 pandemic.

Pankaj Yadav, 24, was one of nearly one million students affected by the cancellation. He took the examination for a doctorate in political science for the third time and was hopeful of cracking it, lining him up for eventually landing a teaching job at a university.

“As students, we can only protest,” Yadav said in the town of Prayagraj where he attended a cram school for the examination. “I thought my paper went well. If I can get enrolled in PhD somewhere, I will become eligible for assistant professor jobs in a university.”

In Delhi, dozens of students holdings placards with writings like “shame on authorities” protested outside the education ministry, as police dragged some of them away. Congress has also called for protests in some states.

The ministry said it was “committed to ensure the sanctity of examinations and protect the interest of students” and that the guilty would be punished. — Reuters

These were the details of the news India’s Modi criticised for exam irregularities amid lack of jobs for this day. We hope that we have succeeded by giving you the full details and information. To follow all our news, you can subscribe to the alerts system or to one of our different systems to provide you with all that is new.

It is also worth noting that the original news has been published and is available at Malay Mail and the editorial team at AlKhaleej Today has confirmed it and it has been modified, and it may have been completely transferred or quoted from it and you can read and follow this news from its main source.

PREV France is voting in key elections that could see a historic far-right win or a hung parliament
NEXT US military raises alert level for Europe bases: reports

Author Information

I am Jeff King and I’m passionate about business and finance news with over 4 years in the industry starting as a writer working my way up into senior positions. I am the driving force behind Al-KhaleejToday.NET with a vision to broaden the company’s readership throughout 2016. I am an editor and reporter of “Financial” category. Address: 383 576 Gladwell Street Longview, TX 75604, USA Phone: (+1) 903-247-0907 Email: [email protected]