Hindustan Times (Chandigarh)

Coaching centre in MP proves fast lane for Jain students, lands in row

- Shruti Tomar, Hema Tiwari and Pramod Karpentar

BHOPAL/INDORE/AGAR-MALWA: Every fourth student from Indore’s Fast IAS Academy who qualified for this year’s Madhya Pradesh civil service (main) examinatio­n got a call for an interview.

The institute is run by a person from the Jain community, and the students who qualified are from the Jain community. There’s more.

The coordinato­r at the government college in remote Agarmalwa district, where the students took their examinatio­n, was a Jain and two controller­s of MP Public Service Commission (MPPSC) were also community.

The coincidenc­es have created a political stir, with the opposition terming it yet another education scam in the state, which is infamous for the Vyapam racket related to manipulati­on in the selection process for government colleges and jobs conducted by the Madhya Pradesh profession­al examinatio­n board.

“We want the government to order a probe in this,” said Jyotiradit­ya Scindia, Congress MP from Guna.

RTI activist Ajay Dubey added that it was almost impossible that so many students from a not-soreputed institute qualified for the interview.

The list of qualifying students was declared on September 28 and included 22 of the 52 students from the institute. In all, 1,528 students were selected for the interview to 507 posts.

Denying any wrongdoing, the coaching institute’s coordinato­r, Chirag Jain, said, “We are ready to face any probe. We selected only talented students, hence they perform well in the examinatio­ns. It’s up to the students which centre they choose.”

Fast IAS Academy came up

merely two years ago in Indore city and is run by a social organisati­on — Digambar Jain Mahasamiti — for the welfare of Jain community students.

The institute’s students, even those from far away Bundelkhan­d region in the northern part of the state, chose to travel hundreds of kilometres to appear for the written exam at a college in Agar-malwa, a remote district in western Madhya Pradesh.

RTI activist Vinayak Parihar alleged that since Agar-malwa has just one government college, all the candidates appeared in the preliminar­y exam at the same centre.

The coordinato­r at the centre, Shashiprab­ha Jain, denied any irregulari­ties and said over 600 students appeared for the exam. “As far as successful candidates

are concerned, their seating arrangemen­ts were in different rooms,” she said.

A candidate who qualified for the interview said all of them chose Agar-malwa as their centre as they wanted to visit some locations together after the examinatio­ns.

However, Ravi Agrahari, who failed the exam and is a whistleblo­wer in the case, said he had never seen so many coincidenc­es.

MPPSC secretary Pawan Sharma said there was no question of inquiry as there was no irregulari­ty. He said there was a possibilit­y of a certain number of students choosing a single centre for the preliminar­y exam but the successful candidates appeared in their mains exam at different centres. He added that the final selection was yet to come.

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