On June 1, 2026, members of the All India Students' Association (AISA) staged a protest over the NEET-UG 2026 paper leak, CUET-UG delays, and concerns surrounding CBSE's On-Screen Marking (OSM) system. The demonstration demanded accountability for recurring examination-related irregularities. Several protesters were later detained by police.
The demonstration reflected growing frustration among students, parents, and opposition parties over a series of examination controversies that have dominated headlines in recent months.
The protests did not emerge in isolation. They followed the cancellation of NEET-UG 2026 over allegations of a paper leak, forcing authorities to reschedule the examination. At the same time, CUET-UG faced technical disruptions affecting thousands of candidates, while CBSE's evaluation system came under scrutiny following reports of answer-sheet mix-ups.
Taken individually, such incidents may appear administrative failures. Collectively, they have contributed to a growing perception that India's examination ecosystem faces deeper structural challenges.
According to various reports, dozens of paper leaks and recruitment-related scams have been recorded across multiple states over the past decade, affecting millions of aspirants and raising recurring concerns about examination security, transparency, and accountability.
One of the most discussed cases involved Class 12 student Vedant Shrivastava, who highlighted a mix-up in his Physics answer sheet under CBSE's On-Screen Marking system.
While CBSE later acknowledged the error and issued an apology, the incident drew widespread attention after the student faced online abuse for raising concerns. The case also led to reports of additional answer-sheet discrepancies being identified within the evaluation system.
For many observers, the episode highlighted not only concerns about evaluation processes but also the challenges students face when attempting to seek redressal.
Protesters and opposition leaders have questioned whether enough has been done to address recurring examination irregularities. Members of Parliament across party lines have also acknowledged the need for reforms to improve the integrity and reliability of India's examination system.
The debate has increasingly moved beyond individual incidents and toward broader questions about institutional accountability. While demands for the resignation of Education Minister Dharmendra Pradhan have gained traction among some student groups and political organisations, education policy experts often argue that the issue extends beyond any single individual.
And such demands for resignation are not unprecedented in Indian politics. Ministers have resigned before when public pressure, institutional failures, or questions of accountability became impossible to ignore.
Former Union Law Minister Ashwani Kumar resigned in 2013 amid controversy over alleged interference in a CBI report linked to the coal allocation scam.
In 2018, M.J. Akbar stepped down as Minister of State for External Affairs following multiple allegations during India's #MeToo movement.
Going further back, Finance Minister T.T. Krishnamachari resigned in 1958 after the findings of the Mundhra scandal inquiry.
Which is why calls for the resignation of Education Minister Dharmendra Pradhan are not emerging in a vacuum.
Paper leaks, recruitment scams, evaluation errors, and technical failures typically involve multiple layers of administration, security systems, contractors, examination bodies, and regulatory oversight. As a result, many analysts contend that lasting solutions will require systemic reforms rather than personnel changes alone.