Vyapam 2.0? Allegations of Recruitment Scam Resurface in Madhya Pradesh.

What has raised eyebrows is the fact that seven of the 10 toppers in the recruitment examination for Group 2 posts are from a nondescript examination centre in Gwalior.

Bhopal: The Madhya Pradesh Employees Selection Board (ESB) found itself in controversy once again after fresh allegations of large-scale rigging in recruitment scams. This has raised fears that the ESB, which was formerly known as Vyapam, is once again riddled with systematic fraud.

What has raised eyebrows is the fact that seven of the 10 toppers in the recruitment examination for Group 2 posts like patwari (a revenue official) are from a nondescript examination centre in Gwalior. Called the NRI College of Engineering and Management, it is owned by BJP MLA Sanjeev Kumar Kushwaha from Bhind.

Nearly 9.80 lakh candidates took the test, conducted in March and April this year across Madhya Pradesh. The ESB announced the results on June 30 and the names of the top 10 scorers on July 10. This is when allegations about rigging emerged.

The board that conducted the test has started examining CCTV footage and the computer logs of the centre where the seven toppers wrote the exam.

While opposition parties are demanding an independent probe into the matter, the Shivraj Singh Chouhan government has denied any irregularities in the recruitment test. The state’s home minister and government spokesperson Narottam Mishra ruled out any irregularities and accused the Congress of trying to “mislead” people ahead of the scheduled assembly polls in the state later this year.

He said that nearly 120 participants have cleared the exam at that particular centre. “Why are questions being raised about only seven toppers? The Congress is trying to mislead the people with its propaganda,” Mishra said.

But this very fact, former Union minister and Congress leader Arun Yadav says, is suspicious. He said that so many aspirants qualifying from one centre is reminiscent of past scams.

The Congress is also making comparisons to the multi-layered Vyapam scam that rocked the nation exactly a decade ago for its sheer magnitude and macabre nature. The recruitment-cum-examination fraud that surfaced in July 2013 involved a mind-boggling number of politicians, bureaucrats, middlemen, impersonators and job aspirants. They were found to be complicit in an organised racket that manipulated in myriad ways the processes of various recruitment and pre-medical tests conducted by the Professional Examination Board or Vyavasayik Pariksha Mandal (Vyapam) since 2008 to rake in the moolah. Nearly 45 persons related to the scam died under mysterious circumstances.

Although the state government renamed the infamous Vyapam as Employees Service Board to avoid the notoriety its name evoked, allegations of scams in the recruitments conducted by the body have kept surfacing.

Arun Yadav alluded to this, saying, “The name of Vyapam has changed thrice over the years. But the corruption continues unabated.”

In recent years, the recruitments of nursing staff, school teachers, constables and agriculture development officers have attracted similar allegations of rigging but the Chouhan government brazened them out.

However, three tests – agriculture extension officers, senior agriculture officers and nursing staff in 2021 – had to be cancelled by the government because the scam appeared too glaring to ignore. The tests were mired in controversy after marks secured by the 10 toppers in the agriculture extension officers’ exam were found nearly identical and they all committed the same errors in their exam. Chief minister Chouhan ordered an inquiry, which showed that the paper was leaked by the private company which was contracted to conduct the exams. The company had already been mired in controversies due to the Vyapam case.

Illustration: Pariplab Chakraborty

Congress cries foul

In the latest Patwari recruitment test too, there is a strong suspicion that the question paper may have been leaked. Congress leader Arun Yadav has pointed out alleged inconsistencies in the recruitment process. Some of these, he said, were:

  • The top scorers belonged to a minuscule fraction of the total examinees, their roll numbers ranging from 2488 7991 to 2488 9693, from a pool of roughly 1,700 candidates. Considering that 9.8 lakh individuals took the exam, the odds of such a coincidence are highly suspicious
  • The answer sheets of the toppers reveal that they signed their exam forms in Hindi but answered the papers in English.
  • These candidates accurately answered 15 questions which were later cancelled by the ESB because incorrect options were provided as answers. No marks were awarded for these questions.
  • One of the seven toppers scored 185 marks. With the ESB removing 15 questions, it meant that the candidate got 100% marks.
  • In the body-marking column (in the answer sheet), one selected candidate wrote in English: ‘Cut on mark nose’; whereas the correct English would be ‘cut mark on nose’’. Arun Yadav wondered how she got 100% marks in English.

The Congress has demanded a CBI probe into the scam, alleging the involvement of BJP leaders in it.

BJP MLA Sanjeev Kumar Kushwaha, whose college in Gwalior is in the eye of the controversy, was elected on a BSP ticket but later joined the ruling party.

When contacted, Kushwaha told the Indian Express: “This institution belongs to me. It used to be an engineering college, which shut down because of low admissions. It has a computer lab and other facilities which are now used as a test centre. We rent out the place for conducting examinations. This (patwari) examination is conducted by the Employees Selection Board (ESB), you should ask them what happened.”

Former chief minister Kamal Nath stated that there have been large-scale irregularities in the recruitment examinations in the state. “Scams have engulfed recruitment exams such as nursing, constable, agriculture extension officers, and many others,” he said.

Haryana: BJP Removes IT Cell Head After Backlash Online for Controversial Tweets on Islam

#ArrestArunYadav was among the top trends on Twitter on Thursday, with users sharing his old tweets and calling for his arrest.

New Delhi: The Haryana unit of Bharatiya Janata Party (BJP) removed its IT cell in-charge, Arun Yadav, with immediate effect late on Thursday night, July 7, following a massive campaign online which drew attention to his controversial tweets against Muslims and Islam. #ArrestArunYadav was among the top trends on Twitter on Thursday.

According to Indian Express, state BJP secretary Gulshan Bhatia late in the evening told that Yadav is being removed from the post with immediate effect without specifying any reason. State BJP president O. P. Dhankar too confirmed the same.

Many Twitter users questioned the “impunity” enjoyed by BJP leaders like Yadav at a time when a criminal and judicial process is set in motion against Alt News co-founder Mohammed Zubair for his alleged controversial tweets.

Although the said controversial tweets by Yadav are not recent, Twitter users pulled out and shared his old tweets between 2017 and May this year. Most of the tweets tagged Delhi and Haryana police handles. No police complaint has been filed against Yadav yet although there is a clamour for his arrest, according to NDTV.

Several Twitter users asked if the government is once again going down the path of lenience shown towards now-suspended BJP spokesperson Nupur Sharma whose controversial remarks against the Prophet resulted in massive public outrage in India and global condemnation.

According to Indian Express, a BJP leader from Haryana said that an intense campaign online against Yadav warranted his sacking from the party. “With over 85,000 tweets seeking his arrest, it has become a big issue,” the IE report quoted the leader as saying.

Yadav joined Twitter in August 2015 and has six lakh followers. With over 28,600 tweets, Yadav has been extensively sharing party and BJP government decisions and policies.

Eye on 2024, Sonia Gandhi to Form ‘Empowered Action Group’

A three-day brainstorming session will be held in Udaipur, where Congress leaders from across the country will discuss internal issues confronting it and come up with solutions.

New Delhi: Buffeted by a string of electoral reverses, the Congress on Monday announced an empowered group will be constituted to address the political challenges ahead and prepare the strategy for the 2024 Lok Sabha elections, days after deliberating on a revival plan presented by poll strategist Prashant Kishor.

Congress President Sonia Gandhi also decided to convene a ‘Chintan Shivir’, a three-day brainstorming session from May 13-15 in Udaipur, where party leaders from across the country will discuss internal issues confronting it and come up with solutions to galvanise the organisation.

Gandhi also constituted six coordination panels for drafting papers and leading discussions on the issues of political and organisational importance, social justice, economy, farmers and youth during the three-day brainstorming conclave.

While Mallikarjun Kharge will lead the panel on political issues, Bhupinder Singh Hooda will head the committee on agriculture and farmers. Mukul Wasnik will spearhead the coordination panel for organisational matters. She has included many of the G 23 leaders, who have been insisting on an overhaul of the organisation, in these panels.

Congress chief spokesperson Randeep Surjewala told reporters that Gandhi will constitute the Empowered Group soon to devise a comprehensive strategy for the 2024 general elections.

Asked if any decision was made on Kishor’s induction into the party, Surjewala was evasive. “Whenever the group is constituted, you will know who is part of it,” he responded tersely.

A section of the Congress has reservations over Kishor’s entry into the party, particularly after the Indian Political Action Committee (I-PAC), an organisation he founded, signed an agreement with Telangana’s ruling TRS for the next assembly elections. The Congress has adversarial relations with the Telangana Rashtra Samithi in the state.

AICC pointsman for Telangana Manickam Tagore had reacted sharply to Kishor’s meeting with Chief Minister K Chandrasekhar Rao and other TRS leaders on Saturday and Sunday before the deal was announced.

“Never trust someone who is friends with your enemy,” Tagore tweeted on Sunday.

Kishor has been insisting he is no longer associated with the I-PAC.

The decisions by the Congress aimed at reviving the party were taken at a meeting of senior leaders who also discussed the plan presented by Kishor.

“The Congress president received a report from the eight-member group on April 21. Today, she discussed the report with the group, and based on the discussions, the Congress president has decided to constitute an ‘Empowered Action Group-2024’ in order to address the political challenges ahead,” Surjewala said.

The meeting was held at the 10, Janpath residence of Sonia Gandhi, where senior leaders including Priyanka Gandhi Vadra, Ambika Soni, K C Venugopal, Surjewala, Mukul Wasnik, Digvijaya Singh, Jairam Ramesh and P Chidambaram were among those present.

During the meeting that lasted for over three hours, Gandhi discussed the recommendations with the members of the group.

These eight leaders comprised the group which explored ways to revive and rejuvenate the party ahead of the assembly elections in some states and the next Lok Sabha polls, and submitted their report with recommendations to the Congress president on April 21.

“The Congress president has decided to convene the ‘Nav Sankalp Chintan Shivir’ of the Indian National Congress in Udaipur on May 13, 14 and 15, 2022, where about 400 Congressmen and women from every state will participate,” Surjewala said.

The focus of the deliberations will be on the current political and economic situation and the challenges they pose to our society and the nation, he said.

Surjewala said the ‘Chintan Shivir’ will also deliberate on the broad strategy of the Congress for the 2024 Lok Sabha elections.

“Issues relating to the welfare and well-being of farmers and farm labourers, and the trampling of the rights of scheduled castes, scheduled tribes, OBCs, religious and linguistic minorities and women, social justice and empowerment and youth will also be discussed in detail.

“In addition, matters relating to organisational restructuring and strengthening will be deliberated,” a party statement said.

Among the six coordination panels constituted by Sonia Gandhi for preparing background notes and leading discussions during the Chintan Shivir, is the political panel headed by Kharge. It includes Ghulam Nabi Azad and Shashi Tharoor, the members of G 23, besides Ashok Chavan, Uttam Kumar Reddy, and Gaurav Gogoi.

The coordination panel for organisational matters has Mukul Wasnik, one of the signatories to the letter written by G 23 leaders to Sonia Gandhi seeking a leadership overhaul, as convener. Its members include Ajay Maken, Tariq Anwar, Ramesh Chennithala, Randeep Surjwala, Adhir Ranjan Chowdhury, Netta D’souza and Meenakshi Natarajan.

Former Haryana Chief Minister Bhupinder Singh Hooda, another member of the G 23, has been made the convener of the coordination panel on farmers and agriculture, with T.S. Singhdeo, Shaktisinh Gohil, Nana Patole, Pratap Bajwa, Arun Yadav, Akhilesh Prasad Singh, among others as members.

The panel on Economy includes P Chidambaram (convener), Anand Sharma, Siddharamaiah, Sachin Pilot, Manish Tewari, Rajeev Gowda, while that on Social Justice has Salman Khurshid (convener), Meira Kumar, Digivijaya Singh, Kumari Selja, and the committee on youth has Amarinder Singh Warring (convener), B V Sriniwas, Neeraj Kundan, Krishna Byra Gowda, Krishna Allavaru, among others.

Many of the G 23 leaders have been adjusted in these panels including Ghulam Nabi Azad, Anand Sharma, Manish Tewari, Shashi Tharoor and Akhilesh Prasad Singh.

Infighting, Resignations and Power Play: Congress’s List of Ailments Grows Longer

While the grand old party is caught in the claws of a crisis, the BJP’s attacks on it have continued unabated.

New Delhi: For the first time since taking over as the party’s interim president, Sonia Gandhi addressed the general secretaries and other office bearers at a meeting on Thursday. Sharing the dais with her were senior leaders Manmohan Singh, A.K. Antony, K.C. Venugopal and Ghulam Nabi Azad.

Congress leaders said that the general thrust of the meeting was on discussing ways to motivate party members at the ground level. It may also result in the party appointing ‘preraks’, or motivators, in various districts. 

It’s significant that the meeting is being held at a time when the Congress is facing small rebellions from different quarters. The party in recent times, has witness much indiscipline among its ranks, especially from its young, aspirational leaders.

In fact, the situation appear to have worsened so much that it looks like the bedrock of the Congress ‘system’ is crumbling.

‘GenNext’ leaders

Over the last few months, the young turks in the party have set the stage for a rebellion. Leaders like Jyotiraditya Scindia, Milind Deora, Jitin Prasada, Sachin Pilot or Deepender Singh Hooda have openly gone against the Congress’s official line on many recent occasions. 

Also read: The Congress’s Crisis Runs Deeper Than Its Leadership Vacuum

Scindia is now being accused by his own party men of trying to destabilise the Congress state government in Madhya Pradesh. Hooda junior was the first among the lot to support the government move to read down Article 370 in Jammu and Kashmir, even as his father threatened to form another party in Haryana if his wishes were not fulfilled. 

Deora suddenly brought the Maharashtra state leadership into the line of questioning. Prasada, it is being said, may still join the BJP after Rahul Gandhi somehow convinced him not to exit before general elections. Pilot is locked in a constant tussle with the Rajasthan chief minister Ashok Gehlot.

That the so-called GenNext leaders have chosen to launch their attack at this crucial hour is intriguing as the Congress has yet to recover from the humiliating defeat in the general elections.

And while it is caught in the claws of this crisis, the BJP’s attacks on it have continued unabated.

What exactly is happening in the Congress? 

The problems in the Congress became apparent after Rahul Gandhi took moral responsibility for the electoral defeat and resigned from the post of president. The party took more than a month to nominate Sonia as the interim chief

In the interim period, however, many of these GenNext leaders threw themselves in the ring with an eye on the top post. 

Also read: Rahul’s Exit is a Historic Opportunity for the Congress, and its Members

But much of this assertion by the young leaders were mouthed only indirectly.

Scindia was the first one to say that he supported “full integration” of Jammu and Kashmir into the Union of India, essentially deflecting from the Congress’s  official line that condemned the “unilateral” and “unconstitutional” way the union government diluted the provisions of Article 370 and bifurcated the state into union territories. 

Deora, Hooda junior, and Jaiveer Shergill, all followed suit. 

Milind Deora, Deepender Hooda and Jaiveer Shergill. Photos: Twitter

So even though the party had secured temporary relief from the rebellion by nominating an ailing Sonia as the party chief, it could not quite quell it.

To top it, Scindia and Pilot’s rebellion – in the only two big states where the Congress is in power – has come back to haunt the party. 

Madhya Pradesh

In Madhya Pradesh, the grand-old party is facing a mini-crisis. It all started when one of Scindia’s aides and a minister in state cabinet Umang Shingar fired the first salvo. He accused former chief minister Digvijaya Singh of interfering in government matters and establish himself as a power centre. He also accused him of being involved in liquor and illegal mining businesses. Scindia backed Singhar and demanded that his complaints should be looked into by the party’s high command. 

In retaliation, Singh’s supporters in the party accused Singhar of helping the BJP by throwing mud at the senior leader’s face.

Rahul Gandhi with MP Congress leaders Kamal Nath and Jyotiraditya Scindia during a public meeting at Ujjain’s Dussehra Maidan. Credit: PTI

Kamal Nath, the chief minister, met Sonia and attempted to calm her. Sonia had earlier asked senior leader A.K. Antony to form a committee to probe the matter.

Much of this infighting came against the backdrop of  the Congress party trying to find a new PCC chief. Observers say that each of these camps want a share of the power, and hence they have gone all out to speak against each other even though it has hurt the government’s image dearly. 

Now the situation is such that Singh, who was backing Ajay Singh, son of former union minister Arjun Singh, for the post of PCC chief,  will now be content with any other leader as long as he is not Scindia. 

Scindia, on the other hand, had made his displeasure clear. He has already resigned from the party’s general secretary’s post. Soon after he showed signs of rebellion, he was made in-charge of Congress party’s screening committee for the Maharashtra elections – a role he did not want. Having lost his traditional Guna seat to the BJP candidate, he is currently worried about his own political future, which, at the moment, seems uncertain.

Also read: To Fight a Presidential-Style Election in India, Congress Must Find the Right Face

Thus, he will settle for nothing less than the PCC chief of a state where the party is in power. Sources said that he threatened the high command that he may have to “explore other options” if he is not appointed as the party chief in Madhya Pradesh. 

Kamal Nath, on the other hand, is worried about sharing power with any of these tall leaders and is batting for his crony Bala Bachchan, a tribal leader, for the state president’s post. Bachchan, a senior leader, suddenly got himself into the contest as the crisis unfolded. 

Senior state leaders like Arun Yadav and many others have taken to social media to express disappointment over the happenings in the party, making the infighting an open war for everyone to see. Shivraj Singh Chouhan, former BJP chief minister, and 12 independent legislators, who are currently supporting the Kamal Nath government, have already started speculating a probable collapse of the government.

Other internal power rifts

Sachin Pilot and Ashok Gehlot. Credit: PTI

Things do not seem to be going smoothly for the Congress even in other states. Rajasthan deputy chief minister Sachin Pilot have been regularly giving statements which have hurt chief minister Ashok Gehlot’s perception as a good administrator. 

The internal rift in Rajasthan Congress became apparent when, on September 11, Pilot criticised the poor law and order situation in the state and said that the state government needs to do much more to contain untoward incidents. “It is true that we should pay more attention to law and order. A lot of incidents have just happened, which should not be repeated. Whether it is from Dhaulpur or Alwar, these are disturbing events,” Pilot said.  

“Communal incidents have happened. Jails have been broken. Ensuring law and order is an important part of the government’s jobs. My daughters should be safe,” he added. Incidentally, Gehlot, as the home minister of the state, is in-charge of law and order. 

Pilot’s supporter and MLA Johri Lal Meena also criticised the state government for not being able to stabilise the law and order situation. Earlier, in an interview to India Today, Pilot had slammed his own government for a poor investigation by the state SIT in the Pehlu Khan lynching case

Also read: The Congress Needs a Bracing Civil War

In Maharashtra, too, the Congress party’s internal rift is clear for everyone to see. The latest bout of bad blood between Congress leaders was triggered by Urmila Matondkar’s resignation from the party. After her defeat in the north Mumbai Lok Sabha seat, she wrote a letter to Milind Deora, then Mumbai Congress chief who later resigned. She complained of lack of organisational support to her and infighting between state leadership during the elections.  

The letter conspicuously got leaked to the media, catalysing Urmila’s resignation – but not before her letter exposed the bad blood between Deora and Sanjay Nirupam, former Mumbai Congress chief, who is said to have inducted Urmila into the party. A range of senior Congress leaders who exited the party in recent months, including the leader of opposition in the assembly Radhakrishna Vikhe-Patil, Abdul Sattar and Kripa Shankar Singh, blamed the rift between Mumbai Congress and Maharashtra Congress for the party’s electoral debacle. 

Similarly, in poll-bound Haryana, the Hooda family has weighed in again but not before threatening the party high command to float another party, if Hooda senior was not made the election-in-charge. This preceded a long-drawn infighting between state president Ashok Tanwar, considered to be an able organisational man, and Bhupinder Singh Hooda over the question of leadership. 

Soon after Deepender supported abrogation of Article 370, his father Bhupinder organised a rally in which he said that the Congress party has lost its way and he would not hesitate to chart his own route. 

Not merely infighting

The problem runs deep in the Congress, which looks scattered and beleaguered in the face of one defeat after another. What is being classified as an assertion struggle between the old guard and young turks stems from the way Congress has operated over the years. Political scientist Rajni Kothari in his seminal paper ‘Congress ‘system’ in India’ argued that the party, in independent India, built itself by accommodating and co-opting local elites and interest groups. 

The leaders came from these interest groups who built a long, complicated chain of patron-client relationships. Political practice of the party, in the process, became largely transactional instead of ideological. 

Also read: ‘Modi 2.0 a Regime of Chaos, Tyranny and Anarchy’: Congress Attacks Centre

This arrangement assured the leader a chunk of support at the constituency level, which, coupled with party support, led them to victory. Under frontal assault from the BJP, this model has failed to motivate and attract cadres,” former Centre For Policy Research fellow Ashish Ranjan wrote in The Wire recently. His field work in Maharashtra showed that with a large-scale exit of leaders from the Congress to other parties, almost all of their client base also switched sides with them.

Leaders like Scindia, Hooda, or Pilot are essentially using this ‘system’ to bargain for greater power, leading to what one may call a war between different interest groups in the Congress. Having spent almost a lifetime in the party, they are well-aware of both the advantages and problems of the party.  

As infighting grows, the BJP-led Centre, meanwhile, has already upped its ante. The ED swiftly moved to arrest Ratul Puri, Kamal Nath’s nephew, in an alleged Rs 345 crore bank fraud case. A couple of days ago, the MHA also cleared a CBI proposal  to reopen some 1984 anti-Sikh riots cases, in which Kamal Nath has been named as one of the accused persons. One already knows about others who are in line

Also read: A New India Has Emerged and Narendra Modi Is Its Voice

The saffron party has also finished one round of campaigning in the poll-bound states of Maharashtra and Haryana and galvanised various interest groups which were disgruntled. It has also been organising almost mass-level defections from the Congress. The grand-old party is the worst hit in Maharashtra, where a number of senior party leaders have joined the BJP, merely weeks before the assembly elections. 

At the meeting on Thursday, apart from lambasting the Union government for its alleged vendetta politics and its multiple failures on the economic front, Sonia Gandhi sent across a stern message to party workers. 

 “We are soon going to have elections in three states.  The situation is challenging and it is only if we keep party interests and nothing else other than party interests uppermost in our minds, that we will regain our lost position.”

She added that the party has a “special responsibility” in Punjab, Rajasthan, Madhya Pradesh, Chhattisgarh and Puducherry – states where it is in power. “These states must stand out as examples of sensitive and responsive governance, accountable and transparent administration. We must be seen to be fulfilling our manifesto commitments.   If not, we will lose people’s support with obvious consequences.”

Gandhi may have attempted to impart some discipline to the party, give it a temporary structure, and motivate workers. But the biggest challenge for her will be to carefully balance different power centres within the Congress ‘system’ – a political arrangement that is bound to crumble in the face of BJP’s frontal attacks