By Administrator | Education | 18-Jul-2026 12:47:38
Addressing students and youth, Rahul Gandhi claimed that repeated incidents of question paper leaks have eroded trust in the country's examination system. He alleged that deserving candidates are forced to suffer because of corruption and administrative failures in conducting competitive and recruitment examinations.
During his speech, Gandhi described the current education system as "corrupt" and argued that students are paying the price for systemic failures. He said that examination paper leaks are no longer isolated incidents but have become a recurring problem affecting students across the country.
According to Gandhi, nearly 7.5 crore students have been impacted by paper leaks over the last ten years, leading to uncertainty, delayed careers, and mental stress for lakhs of candidates preparing for competitive examinations.
The Congress leader stressed that repeated examination irregularities have weakened students' confidence in the education system. He urged political parties and governments to work together to ensure fair, transparent, and secure examinations.
Gandhi also emphasized that protecting the future of students should be treated as a national priority rather than a political issue.
The issue of paper leaks has remained a major concern in recent years, with several recruitment and entrance examinations facing allegations of irregularities. The debate has intensified following multiple controversies involving national and state-level examinations, prompting demands for stronger security measures and greater accountability in the examination process.
Rahul Gandhi's remarks come amid ongoing discussions over examination reforms and paper leak incidents reported in various competitive and recruitment examinations across the country. Governments at both the Centre and state levels have introduced measures in recent years to strengthen examination security and curb malpractices.
Rahul Gandhi has alleged that corruption and repeated paper leaks have severely impacted students across the country, claiming that around 7.5 crore students have been affected over the last decade. He called for reforms to improve transparency, accountability, and fairness in the examination system.