Millennium Post

Invidious slippage

Bihar Public Service Commission paper leak at VKSC centre in Bhojpur district represents a routine occurrence and raises serious questions over the role of the government, involvemen­t of administra­tive officials and credibilit­y of the BPSC at large

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government announced the cancellati­on of the exam, it raised questions about Bihar Chief Minister Nitish Kumar’s zero tolerance for corruption, by putting the whole system under the scanner. For the first time in the over 15-year-long regime of Nitish Kumar, the question paper of state’s premier examinatio­n – BPSC — got leaked, forcing the state government to cancel the exam without any mention of the next date to conduct the exam.

If you are surprised by this type of ‘heinous’ corruption, which could not be possible without the involvemen­t of top-ranked officials, then you have to take a pause as it seems nowadays it has become a new normal in Bihar. It’s also a fact that you may get tired of counting the weird cases of corruption, but you wouldn’t find any decline in the incidents of dishonesty despite the state having a huge number of upright and dedicated IAS officials at every position.

“Question paper leak is not new in Bihar. It has become a regular phenomenon in the regime of Chief Minister Nitish Kumar. You take the name of any exam, you will find the question of that exam leaked and the government doesn’t even bother to inquire about it,” said Dilip Kumar, who heads Rashtriya Chhatra Ekta Manch – an organisati­on of aspirants of competitiv­e examinatio­ns, including BPSC.

Kumar, who is also a BPSC aspirant and was registered to appear for the PT exam, brought the paper leak matter into the notice of Bhojpur District Magistrate Roshan Kushwaha – a 2014 batch IAS officer – soon after the question paper of the PT started circulatin­g on the social media.

Putting the role of incumbent BPSC chairman RK Mahajan under the lens, the students’ leader said, “The credential­s of Mahajan is not so good as when he was in the Education Department, the paper of teachers’ eligibilit­y test was leaked.”

However, Dilip Kumar further said that it’s a huge exam racket running in connivance with ‘big shot’ political leaders and officials sitting at different influentia­l positions in the state government.

Expressing his sympathy while getting nostalgic, Yudhyavir Singh — Assistant Professor at AIIMS-DELHI — said, “It’s a catastroph­ic incident for several aspirants belonging to economical­ly backward sections of society. It’s like dreams of students getting shattered as it has put the whole system under the scanner. It also raises questions over the sanctity of the exam to be conducted in future. Under the given circumstan­ces, the credibilit­y of the BPSC would always be under the lens.”

“BPSC is Bihar’s prestigiou­s examinatio­n and it is conducted to select the best officials for exhibiting their administra­tive acumen in strengthen­ing the good governance agenda of the state as well as central government. Students belonging to weaker sections of society get into the preparatio­n for BPSC by going through several hardships. The cancellati­on of the BPSC exam is like faith and dream breaking into pieces,” said Singh, who had also witnessed paper leak incidents during his preparatio­ns for medical entrances.

Agreeing with Singh, BPSC aspirant Praveen Kumar, who hails from a remote village in Gaya district, said, “I was hopeful of clearing the PT exam as I had scored well. I belong to a poor family and my father is a farmer. The cancellati­on of the exam has left me in a lurch as I’m not able to find a way forward to move on.”

Praveen, who is a postgradua­te and is currently pursuing a degree in Law, takes tuition classes to meet his expenses.

“As I’m an elder son in the family, it looks awkward for me to take money from my parents. I’m managing the expenses of my studies, coaching classes, food and accommodat­ion on my own,” he said.

Praveen is not the only such case. The list is very long. Take the example of another aspirant Sanjay Rajak, who is in a great shock as he had wished to clear the exam for his parents to provide them a respectful life. His mother washes utensils to meet the expenses of his studies while his father works as a farm labourer.

As the matter has been handed over to the Economic offence Unit (EOU) to investigat­e the whole scam, officials have found very surprising facts associated with the BPSC paper leak case.

EOU officials are surprised to know how and why Veer Kunwar Singh College (VKSC) in the outskirts of Ara Town was identified as an exam centre by the Bihar Public Service Commission (BPSC).

Officials have claimed that the exam centre, which is a college of a powerful politician, had nothing in order and brazenly ignored BPSC guidelines. “The college was never meant for an exam of this magnitude and it took things very lightly, making its own rules — be it deliberate­ly to suit a selected few or out of sheer ignorance. The CCTV was also not functional. Besides, some 25 selected candidates were seated in one room and all handed over Set-c questions 25 minutes ahead of the start of the examinatio­n, which was next to impossible,” the officials said, adding that other students kept waiting for the OMR sheet and question papers till 20 minutes after the scheduled start.

The Special Investigat­ion Team (SIT) has seized the OMR sheets of candidates and sought the details of the candidates from the BPSC for their interrogat­ion. “There may be involvemen­t of people at various levels. Those arrested are not attributin­g a strong and convincing reason for the mess at the centre and have given contradict­ory statements. The alleged beneficiar­ies need to be identified. Some insiders may also be involved. Such tampering cannot happen at the level of a few, as the repercussi­ons are known to all should the plan go awry,” the officials said.

“Nobody is answering why only Set-c was supplied in a room and at whose instructio­ns. Besides, why was the FIR not immediatel­y lodged in the case once the discrepanc­y was detected? It happened only after one and a half days,” the EOU official said, adding that the arrest of four persons, including the BDO who was the static magistrate, was just the beginning.

Commenting on the proceeding­s, ADG (EOU) Nayyar Hasnain Khan said that 40 persons have been involved with the probe. “We are confident to crack it very soon and nab the kingpin. I am monitoring the case on a daily basis. Technical and forensic experts are also examining some numbers to unravel the modus operandi,” Khan said.

It was also a matter of investigat­ion as to why the complaints of irregulari­ties emerged from Ara centre only, though there were around 1,083 centres across the state. “It needs to be ascertaine­d if the question was available anywhere before Ara and that requires establishi­ng backward linkages to find out the first time the question paper was uploaded. It also needs to be found out if there was any conspiracy hatched exclusivel­y for Ara centre to benefit a selected few,” he added.

As of now, the EOU has arrested four persons — BDO Jai Vardhan Gupta who was deputed as a static magistrate to oversee the examinatio­n in the district’s Veer Kunwar Singh College (VKSC); Yogendra Singh, principal-cum-centre superinten­dent; Sushil Kumar Singh, lecturer-cum-controller and Agam Kumar Sahay, lecturercu­m-assistant centre superinten­dent of VKSC.

Even though the affiliatio­n of VKSC with Veer Kunwar Singh University was valid till 2017, the college management managed to get the BPSC examinatio­n centre at VKSC. The investigat­ing agencies are probing the matter from all the aspects to find out the mastermind behind the paper leak scam.

During the investigat­ion, SIT found that the BPSC examinatio­n controller received one set of the leaked paper at 11.43 am on Sunday, 17 minutes before the paper was to begin at about 1,083 centres in the state’s 38 districts.

More than six lakh candidates enrolled for Sunday’s examinatio­n conducted for recruitmen­t to 802 posts in Bihar’s civil services. The preliminar­y exam was earlier postponed on two occasions.

The SIT also spoke to the individual who forwarded the 22-page question paper to the exam controller. This person, an official said, had received the question paper at 11.33 am. It is not clear who sent him the leaked paper, but an official underlined that Whatsapp tagged the document on his phone as one which had been “forwarded many times”.

The initial probe indicates that all the versions of the leaked examinatio­n paper circulatin­g on social media appeared to have originated from a single point.

The team, which visited Ara’s VKSC, also came across complaints from aspirants that a select group of students were placed in a separate room and given the question papers 15 minutes before the examinatio­n started at 12 noon.

The college is linked to a noted contractor Surendra Singh who comes from a political family and was earlier involved in the fake stamp paper case. Surendra Singh, who is the husband of a former JD (U) MLA from Barhara constituen­cy, said that the VKSC was establishe­d in 1978 after his family members donated five acres of land in the name of the state governor in 1987 to construct the college. However, he refused the allegation that the question paper leaked or went viral from the VKSC premises.

The former secretary of VKSC, however, admitted that more than 900 aspirants appeared for the BPSC PT and created a ruckus over the delay in distributi­on of OMR sheets and question papers.

Meanwhile, experts have raised doubts over the change in the pattern to appoint BPSC chairman by the state government as a key factor in the paper leak. Earlier, academicia­ns were given the task to lead BPSC as its chairman but Nitish Kumar’s government changed that system and created re-employment opportunit­ies for retired bureaucrat­s by appointing them as BPSC chairman. The paper leak incident is the first in the tenure of the incumbent chairman RK Mahajan.

Besides, there is another major interestin­g developmen­t that has taken place in Nitish Kumar’s regime. The government has suddenly found that private schools and affiliated colleges would have better facilities for aspirants than government­owned schools.

Bihar CM Nitish Kumar has also given a strong message to perpetrato­rs. “We took immediate action in the matter. We are checking where and how the paper was leaked. An enquiry has begun. Police are investigat­ing. I have asked them to speed it up. Anyone found involved would be punished,” Kumar had said after the paper leak was reported.

Calling the paper leak “unfortunat­e, sad and condemnabl­e”, Leader of Opposition in the Bihar Assembly Tejashwi Yadav said, “Such incidents have happened multiple times in various exams, including school papers. But no one learns. We have taken this up several times but to no avail. Students’ lives are being played with.”

Noting that the BPSC’S question papers often leak in Bihar, Tejashwi quipped that the state government should rename it the Bihar Public Leak Commission (BPLC). In Bihar, the BPSC never holds exams on time, he added.

“BPSC is a prestigiou­s examinatio­n in Bihar. It has a specific institutio­n to conduct the examinatio­n. Still, question papers are frequently leaked here. You could imagine what would happen to other examinatio­ns. As question papers are frequently leaking in Bihar that means somebody is sitting in the system and repeatedly doing such acts. State government should compensate every student with Rs 5,000, especially those who came to the examinatio­n centres from remote areas,” Yadav said.

Views expressed are personal

 ?? ?? The paper leak is a ‘catastroph­ic incident’ for students who made all out efforts to prepare for the exam and reported to the exam centres
The paper leak is a ‘catastroph­ic incident’ for students who made all out efforts to prepare for the exam and reported to the exam centres
 ?? ?? The present turn of events may dampen the credibilit­y of the BPSC
Protesters burn an effigy against the 67th BPSC preliminar­y exam paper leak in Patna
Security personnel check vehicles near BPSC office in Patna
The present turn of events may dampen the credibilit­y of the BPSC Protesters burn an effigy against the 67th BPSC preliminar­y exam paper leak in Patna Security personnel check vehicles near BPSC office in Patna
 ?? ?? Condemning the routine paper leak incidents, Tejashwi Yadav quipped that BPSC should be renamed as Bihar Public Leak Commission (BPLC)
Condemning the routine paper leak incidents, Tejashwi Yadav quipped that BPSC should be renamed as Bihar Public Leak Commission (BPLC)
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