The spate of leaks in a multitude of sectors raise serious questions about the security of the individuals, the future of students and youth and the credibility of the government as well.
The most frequently recurring have been the leakages of question papers of various exams. The leakage in Staff Selection Commission (SSC) exams affected lakhs of job seekers. The Centre initially dismissed it as unfounded allegations and has said there would be no re-examination, even as the police registered a case and made arrests.
Then came the news of leakage of papers of CBSE exams, following which re-exams were ordered, leaving students, parents and teachers angry.
Just before this, the dates of Karnataka assembly elections were leaked before the Election Commission could announce it.
Earlier, there have been reports of leakages of Aadhaar data – again denied stoutly by the government – and the news of leakage of personal data of social media users for unscrupulous manipulation of minds by playing on peoples likes, dislikes, fears and hates, which political players use to devise propaganda strategy to nudge the gullible towards a particular view point.
The CBSE paper leak coming on top of several previous ones has led to widespread angry responses. #CBSEPaperLeak and #LeakingGovt trended on twitter as people took to the social media platform to vent their anguish and frustration.
Congress chief Rahul Gandhi on Thursday attacked the Prime Minister Narendra Modi-led government by recounting the “leaks” that had taken place during its tenure.
“The exam leaks destroy the hopes and futures of millions of students. The Congress always protected our institutions. This is what happens when institutions are destroyed by the RSS/BJP. Believe me when I say, this is only the beginning,” he tweeted.
In an earlier tweet, he used the hashtag #BasEkAurSaal, a reference to the government being left with one year of its term.
Rahul wrote: “How many leaks? Data Leak, Aadhaar Leak, SSC Exam Leak, Election Date Leak, CBSE papers leaked, there is a leak in everything, chowkidar (watchman) is weak.”
The chowkidar remark is a direct reference to Prime Minister Narendra Modi’s statement in a speech when he said that he was the nation’s ‘chowkidar’ or security guard.
(How many leaks? Data leak! Aadhaar leak! SSC exam leak! Election date leak! CBSE papers leak! There is a leak in everything, the watchdog is weak)
The CBSE yesterday announced re-tests of the Class 10 Mathematics and Class 12 Economics exams following reports that the papers were leaked, following which the government announced a probe even as students expressed anger over the issue.
PM Modi, too, expressed unhappiness over the development and sought strict action from HRD minister Prakash Javadekar.
In another “leak”-related development, the Election Commission (EC) constituted a committee of six officials to probe how information on the Karnataka Assembly poll dates was leaked on Tuesday.
The committee was set up hours after BJP’s IT cell chief Amit Malviya and Karnataka Congress IT head Srivatsa simultaneously tweeted out the dates for the Karnataka Assembly polls, even before Chief Election Commissioner OP Rawat had announced the dates. Incidentally, while both got the polling date correct, they got the date of counting wrong. A Kannada news channel also flashed the dates before the EC’s announcement.
Curiously, according to news reports, while the Congress leader was being questioned in the probe, BJP’s IT cell chief was not being probed. The EC has asked the committee to submit a report within seven days.