बेबाक · Editorial
ଏକ ସାର୍ବଜନୀନ ଟ୍ରଷ୍ଟ ଭାବେ ପରୀକ୍ଷାଃ ଭାରତର ଯୁବକମାନଙ୍କୁ ପରୀକ୍ଷା କରୁଥିବା ଯନ୍ତ୍ରପାତିର ମରାମତି
ଏକ ବାତିଲ ହୋଇଥିବା ଡାକ୍ତରୀ ପ୍ରବେଶ, ଫେରସ୍ତ ଉପରେ ଶିକାର କରୁଥିବା ସ୍କାମ୍, ଏବଂ କୋର୍ଟ ଏବଂ କମିଶନ ପଦକ୍ଷେପ ନେବା ଏକ ପରୀକ୍ଷା ପ୍ରଣାଳୀ ପ୍ରକାଶ କରେ ଯାହା ଅଖଣ୍ଡତାକୁ କେନ୍ଦ୍ରୀୟ ଭାବରେ ବିବେଚନା କରିବା ଆବଶ୍ୟକ, ଆନୁସଙ୍ଗିକ ନୁହେଁ |
ଚାପରେ ଥିବା ଏକ ବ୍ୟବସ୍ଥା
ସେହି ଆଶାୟୀଙ୍କୁ ବିଚାର କରନ୍ତୁ ଯିଏ ଏନ୍. ଇ. ଇ. ଟି. ୟୁ. ଜି. 2026 ପାଇଁ ପ୍ରସ୍ତୁତ ହୋଇଥିଲେ, ତା 'ପରେ ବ୍ୟାଙ୍କ ବିବରଣୀ ଯାଞ୍ଚ କିମ୍ବା ସଂଶୋଧନ କରିବାକୁ ପଡ଼ିଥିଲା କାରଣ
The Core Tension
Here lies the dilemma that makes exam governance so unforgiving. When a paper or process is compromised, cancellation may become the only honest remedy, for a tainted result rewards the cheat and mocks the diligent. Yet cancellation also punishes the innocent majority, who must re-prepare, re-travel, and re-stake precious time for a breach they did not cause. Every voided examination is therefore both a correction and a fresh injury. The deeper failure is not the decision to cancel; it is that the system was vulnerable enough to require it. An architecture that forces administrators to choose between two harms has already failed the very test of fairness it sets for everyone who sits before it.
Steel-Manning Both Sides
Fairness demands stating each side at its strongest. The administering agencies face a genuinely hard problem: examinations are run at large scale, across many centres, against actors looking for weak points. Their response is not nothing. Papers are being moved under guard by CRPF and CISF personnel with clean service records; refund mechanisms, however belated, are being corrected; security measures are reviewed with a focus on exam integrity. From the aspirant's chair the view is bleaker. The same record includes a cancelled entrance, Telegram channels falsely promising leaked NEET-UG re-exam papers, and a 19-year-old from Bihar arrested for allegedly hacking hundreds of student accounts to steal NEET refunds. The state asks for trust while students confront the consequences of failure. Both accounts are true at once; that simultaneity is precisely the problem to be solved.
What the Record Shows
The specifics, drawn from the public record, are damning in their ordinariness. The National Testing Agency has had to open a post-exam facility so candidates can correct the bank details on which their refunds depend, a refund linked to the earlier examination's cancellation. In Gujarat, the Ahmedabad Cyber Crime Police uncovered two NEET-linked cases: a Telegram scam falsely promising leaked NEET-UG re-exam papers, and the arrest of a 19-year-old from Bihar accused of hacking hundreds of student accounts to steal refunds. The Central Information Commission, ruling on an RTI appeal, ordered the Central Board of Secondary Education to disclose information on answer-book procurement while allowing exemptions for sensitive data. Transparency, it turns out, still had to be demanded.
The Courts Step In
When the examination machinery falters, the burden shifts to other institutions, and that shift is itself a warning. The Supreme Court has granted relief to candidates appearing for the Uttar Pradesh Higher Judicial Service recruitment examination; the Central Information Commission has compelled disclosure in a procurement matter; the police have had to chase fraud that stronger systems should make harder to attempt. Each intervention is welcome, and each is an indictment. Paramilitary escorts for question papers treat a symptom; they cannot by themselves cure a system whose frailties surface only after candidates, appellants or investigators are forced into action. A testing regime that works only when a constitutional court, an information commission or a cyber-crime unit is called to rescue it is not working well enough. Integrity designed in is cheaper, and kinder, than integrity litigated after.
A Way Forward
Repair is neither mysterious nor utopian, and it begins by treating examinations as a public trust rather than a seasonal event. First, an enforceable, auditable chain of custody for every question paper, with security arrangements such as CRPF and CISF escorts treated as part of a clear protocol rather than a reassuring afterthought. Second, transparency by default: answer-book procurement should be disclosable under the Right to Information Act without an appellant having to fight all the way to the Central Information Commission, except where genuinely sensitive data must be protected. Third, cross-agency standards for secure, verified refund channels, privacy by design, and independent audits that publish breach data and redress timelines. Fourth, swift compensation and restored schedules for the honest majority whenever cancellation is unavoidable. Trust, once engineered into the system, need not be rescued from it.
ଏକ ପରୀକ୍ଷା ଏକ ଲଜିଷ୍ଟିକ୍ସ ଅଭ୍ୟାସ ନୁହେଁ; ଏହା ଏକ ପ୍ରତିଶ୍ରୁତି ଯାହା ରାଜ୍ୟ ପ୍ରତ୍ୟେକ ଆଶାୟୀଙ୍କୁ ଦେଇଥାଏ ଯେ ପ୍ରୟାସ, ପ୍ରବେଶ ନୁହେଁ, ଫଳାଫଳ ସ୍ଥିର କରିବ |
At stake is whether high-stakes public examinations protect equality, informed public scrutiny, and students’ dignity under Articles 14, 19(1)(a), 21 and the RTI Act.
Public Exam Trust Bill
Parliament should enact a Public Examination Trust Bill requiring every national exam body to publish, under RTI-compatible rules, its procurement, security, cancellation and refund protocols, with only narrowly justified redactions for live security risks. The Bill should create an independent Exam Integrity and Grievance Ombudsperson with power to order time-bound corrections, refund safeguards, candidate notices, and post-cancellation accountability reports, so cancellation remains a last honest remedy rather than the system’s routine escape valve.
ଆପଣଙ୍କର ସାମ୍ବିଧାନିକ ଅଧିକାର
ଏହି କାହାଣୀରେ ସମ୍ବିଧାନ କ "ଣ ଗ୍ୟାରେଣ୍ଟି ଦେଉଛି?Any citizen may ask any public authority for information and must normally receive it within 30 days. It flows from the right to know under Article 19(1)(a).
StatutoryEvery citizen has the right to freedom of speech and expression — including a free press and the right to know — subject only to the reasonable restrictions in Article 19(2).
Fundamental RightThe State shall not deny any person equality before the law or the equal protection of the laws. Like must be treated alike; the law cannot be arbitrary.
Fundamental RightNo person shall be deprived of life or personal liberty except by a fair, just and reasonable procedure established by law — read by the courts to include dignity, privacy, health, a clean environment and livelihood.
Fundamental RightWhat this editorial rests on
Drawn from our live multi-newsroom feed — read the reporting at source.
ଆନ୍ଦୋଳନରେ ସାମିଲ ହୁଅନ୍ତୁ।
ଗୋଟିଏ ସମୟରେ ଗୋଟିଏ ନିର୍ଭୀକ ସମ୍ପାଦକୀୟ-ଆପଣଙ୍କ ଭାଷାରେ। ଏହା ସହିତ ସାମ୍ବିଧାନିକ ଅନୁରୋଧ ଯାହା ଅନୁସରଣ କରିବା ଆବଶ୍ୟକ |
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