Avinash Azad
A hard-hitting revelation in the Jammu and Kashmir Legislative Assembly has exposed a troubling disconnect between the government’s claims and the reality of recruitment exam irregularities, reigniting public outrage over the integrity of the Union Territory’s examination processes.
Responding to a pointed written query from MLA Bani, Dr. Rameshwar Singh, on Monday, the J&K government insisted that “no paper leak [was] reported during the last two years”—a statement swiftly undermined by its own admission of significant irregularities in 2022 that compromised major recruitment exams.
Dr. Singh, representing the Bani constituency, demanded a detailed account of paper leak scandals over the past two years, along with actions taken against culpable agencies. The government’s response, while denying outright leaks, laid bare a series of disturbing incidents that call into question the robustness of J&K’s examination system and the accountability of those tasked with upholding it.
The 2022 Irregularities: A Scandal in Disguise?
The government conceded that “certain irregularities” plagued examinations conducted by the Jammu and Kashmir Service Selection Board (JKSSRB) in 2022. These incidents affected three high-stakes exams:
– Accounts Assistant (Finance Department) on March 6, 2022;
– Junior Engineer (Civil), Jal Shakti Department on March 20, 2022;
– Sub-Inspector (Home Department) on March 27, 2022.
While stopping short of labeling these as paper leaks, the government’s vague reference to “irregularities” has done little to quell suspicions of malpractice. Sources familiar with the matter allege that these incidents involved unauthorized access to question papers, favoritism in evaluation, and procedural lapses—issues that, while not technically leaks, severely undermined the exams’ fairness. Thousands of aspirants, many from economically vulnerable backgrounds, had pinned their hopes on these opportunities, only to see their dreams tainted by systemic failures.
The government’s sole action? Blacklisting the “concerned responsible agency” involved in conducting these exams. Yet, it offered no specifics—neither the agency’s name nor the nature of its culpability—leaving a gaping hole in transparency. “Blacklisting is a slap on the wrist when careers are at stake,” fumed a senior opposition leader, speaking on condition of anonymity. “Who was this agency? What exactly did they do? The public deserves answers, not evasions.”
A Clean Chit for JKPSC—Or a Convenient Silence?
In contrast, the government gave the Jammu and Kashmir Public Service Commission (JKPSC) a clean bill of health, stating, “No such incident has occurred in the Jammu and Kashmir Public Service Commission till date.” This assertion, while reassuring, raises eyebrows given the JKPSC’s role in recruiting for gazetted posts—a process not immune to scrutiny in the past. Critics argue that the absence of reported incidents may reflect underreporting or a lack of robust oversight rather than flawless execution.
The Bigger Picture: Trust on Trial
Dr. Singh’s query comes against a backdrop of simmering discontent over recruitment scandals in J&K, where paper leaks and irregularities have historically eroded trust in government hiring. The 2022 JKSSRB fiasco, though now two years old, remains a raw wound for aspirants who allege they were cheated out of fair chances. Protests erupted at the time, with candidates demanding re-examinations and a CBI probe—calls that largely went unheeded beyond the agency blacklisting.
The government’s claim of “no paper leaks in the last two years” hinges on a narrow definition that conveniently sidesteps the 2022 irregularities, which predate the March 2023–March 2025 window by mere months. This technicality has infuriated observers, who accuse the administration of dodging accountability with semantics. “If exams were compromised, call it what it is—a betrayal of merit,” said a student activist from Jammu. “Blacklisting one agency doesn’t fix a broken system.”
A Call for Justice
MLA Dr. Rameshwar Singh, is unlikely to let the matter rest. Sources close to him suggest he may press for a deeper investigation into the 2022 irregularities, including the identity of the blacklisted agency and whether its punishment matched the scale of the offense. The lack of detail in the government’s response—omitting the extent of aspirant impact, the financial cost, or preventive measures since—only fuels demands for a fuller reckoning. For a Union Territory grappling with unemployment and a restless youth bulge, the stakes could not be higher. The JKSSRB oversees recruitment for critical grassroots roles, while the JKPSC shapes the administrative elite. Any hint of malpractice in these processes risks not just individual livelihoods but the credibility of J&K’s governance itself.