HomeNewsOpinionWhat a medical exam scandal says about Modi’s India

What a medical exam scandal says about Modi’s India

Progressive states have long opposed the nationwide medical entrance test as discriminatory. Suspicions of rigging have boosted their claim to scrap it

June 19, 2024 / 15:25 IST
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The public outrage is helping to shine a spotlight on what progressive states have been saying since before the nationwide test.

A scandal involving allegedly leaked papers and irregular scoring in a government-run Indian medical entrance exam has exposed a deeper fault line. By controlling the choice of the nation’s doctors, Prime Minister Narendra Modi’s administration is pushing its hard-right Hindu agenda into the heart of the nation’s health and education systems.

The nationwide test conducted in May had 2.4 million aspirants jostling for 100,000 seats in the country’s medical colleges. The results, when they were announced this month, were nothing less than shocking. As many as 67 students had scored perfect marks, which not more than two or three candidates achieve usually.

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It doesn’t end there. As Maheshwer Peri, the founder of Careers360, an information provider on higher education, explains in this video (in Hindi), the number of students who have scored enough for admission to a decent college has jumped threefold this year. With this kind of grade inflation, good institutions will be out of reach of many deserving candidates.

The sanctity of the examination has been hit, says the Indian Supreme Court. “We need answers for that,” the judges told the lawyers for the National Testing Agency last week, after students and parents alleged that the paper had been leaked. The federal government has promised to look into any malpractices, though it insists there was no scam. Opposition parties claim that it was exactly that.