Hindustan Times ST (Jaipur)

Fake MP education board catches officials off-guard

- Shruti Tomar shrutitoma­r@hindustant­imes.com

BHOPAL OFFICIAL SAY THE FAKE BOARD WAS INVOLVED IN EVERYTHING, FROM PREPARING THE PAPERS AND CONDUCTING EXAMS TO ISSUING MARK SHEETS

: Officials of the Madhya Pradesh Board of Secondary Education (MPBSE) were shocked when the Uttar Pradesh police called them up to say that as many as 10 bundles of Class 12 examinatio­n papers had been found stuffed in a sack near Kanpur district’s Fattepur village on February 18.

The board examinatio­ns in Madhya Pradesh were set to begin on March 1, exactly ten days later.

The news caused a flutter among board officials, and various theories were floated as to how its examinatio­n papers ended up in another state. Some even wondered if a gang of fraudsters had taken them to Uttar Pradesh.

The truth, however, turned out to be even more startling. “A closer scrutiny revealed that the paper actually belonged to a fake parallel education board operating from Gwalior,” an MPBSE official said on the condition of anonymity. “It called itself the Madhya Pradesh Senior Secondary Board, which sounds almost like the Madhya Pradesh Board of Secondary Education.”

According to the MPBSE official, the fake board was involved in everything, from preparing the papers and conducting examinatio­ns to issuing mark sheets and certificat­es to examinees. The racketeers would charge anywhere between ₹15,000 and ₹20,000 per head for their “services”.

Their client base largely consisted of students who skipped the examinatio­ns due to poor preparatio­n or the clampdown on the cheating mafia.

District education officer Ajay Neekhra said it was likely that the culprits have been in operation for many years in Madhya Pradesh and its neighbouri­ng states. Two years ago, they had busted a fake board operating under the ‘Board of Senior Secondary, Madhya Bharat’ title.

MPBSE chairman SR Mohanty confirmed the developmen­t. “Barra police station house officer Bhaskar Mishra called us to say they had found leaked copies of the Class 12 chemistry paper in Kanpur. We immediatel­y asked for a copy of the examinatio­n papers and checked its authentici­ty. That was when we realised that the board’s name on the question papers was different,” he said.

Further investigat­ion revealed that many students had fallen for the fraud. “We did not issue an alert for fear that it would cause undue panic during examinatio­n time,” Mohanty said.

Gwalior collector Rahul Jain said the MPBSE has sought a probe into the matter. “It’s just a matter of time before we nab the culprits with the help of the police,” he added.

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