Carrying a copy of the constitution, 30-year-old activist Abhijeet Dipke led a protest at New Delhi’s Jantar Mantar, channeling widespread fury over recurring exam paper leaks. The demonstration marks a pivotal shift for the Cockroach Janta Party, moving its massive digital influence into the streets to demand ministerial accountability.
The movement, which commands an audience of 22 million on Instagram, has rapidly evolved from an online phenomenon into a tangible political headache for Prime Minister Narendra Modi’s government. Dipke, who returned to India from the U.S. to spearhead the campaign, frames the struggle as a fight against systemic educational failure and institutional neglect.Students gathered in the capital to voice frustration over the government's inability to secure examination processes, a recurring grievance that has left millions of young Indians facing uncertain futures. While senior officials remain critical of the protests and the administration maintains its resistance, Dipke insists this is only the beginning. He plans to expand the movement nationwide, betting that the collective anger of a disillusioned youth demographic will force a shift in governance and prompt the resignation of the education minister.
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