The News Freedom
New Delhi, February 5
The Centre today introduced the Public Examinations (Prevention of Unfair Means) Bill, 2024 in the Lok Sabha to curb leaks, malpractices as well as organized malpractices in recruitment examinations like UPSC, SSC and entrance tests such as NEET, JEE, and CUET. The Bill was introduced in the house by Union Minister of State ( Science and Technology, Personnel, Public Grievances, Pensions, Atomic Energy and Space), Dr Jitendra Singh.
“Prevention of Unfair Means Bill, 2024 will also cover entrance examinations held by the Union Public Service Commission, the Staff Selection Commission, the Railways, banking recruitment examinations and all computer-based examinations conducted by the National Testing Agency”’ he said.
The Bill proposes a punishment of a minimum of three to five years of imprisonment to curb cheating and for those involved in organised crimes of cheating will face five to 10 years of imprisonment and a minimum fine of Rs 1 crore.
“The Bill is aimed at preventing organised gangs and institutions that are involved in unfair means for monetary gains, but it protects candidates from its provisions. In the last few years, leaks of question papers and organised cheating had affected the interests of lakhs of student due to cancellation of tests and examinations,” said Dr Jitendra Singh, elaborating on the need and significance of the Bill.
“In the recent past, many states have had to cancel or were unable to declare results of their public examinations due to adverse impact of unfair practices and means adopted by antisocial, criminal elements, he said. “These unfair practices if not effectively prevented and deterred will continue to jeopardize the future and careers of millions of aspiring youths of this country. In many instances, it has been observed that organized groups and mafia elements are involved. They deploy solver gangs, impersonation methods and indulge in paper leaks. The Bill primarily aims to deter such kind of nefarious elements,” the Minister further said.
Giving details, the Minister further said that at present, there is no specific substantive law at national level to deal with unfair means adopted or offences committed by persons, organized groups, or any other agency, organization that adversely impacts the conduct of Public Examinations by Central Government and its agencies.
“Therefore, it is imperative that the elements both within and outside the examination systems, that exploit these vulnerabilities are identified and effectively dealt with by way of a comprehensive Central legislation. There is a need to prevent such criminal elements from playing with lives and hopes of genuine and sincere youths who appear in these examinations,” he said.
Dr Jitendra Singh said that the objective is to bring in greater transparency, fairness and credibility to the Public Examination systems and to reassure the youths that their sincere and genuine efforts will be fairly rewarded and their futures are safe. “The Bill is aimed at effectively and legally deterring persons, organised groups or institutions that indulge in various unfair means and adversely impact the public examination systems for monetary or wrongful gains,” he said. The Bill, however, clarified Dr Jitendra Singh, protects the candidates appearing in the examination from the punitive provisions and they will be governed under the provisions of the existing unfair means policy of the examination conducting authority.
“Candidates shall not be liable for action within the purview of the Bill and shall continue to be covered under the extant administrative provisions of the concerned public examination authority,” he said.
In view of many examinations being conducted online and the increasing role of technology in the conduct of public examinations, Dr Jitendra Singh said, it has also been decided to set up a High-level National Technical Committee on Public Examinations which shall look into developing protocol for insulating digital platforms, devising ways and means for developing foolproof IT security system, ensuring comprehensive electronic surveillance of the examinations centres and formulating national standards and service levels for both, IT and physical infrastructure, to be deployed for the conduct of such examinations.
Key Provisions:
- Increased Penalties: The bill proposes jail terms ranging from 3 to 10 years and fines of up to Rs 1 crore for individuals and groups involved in cheating.
- Targeting Organized Crime: It specifically targets “solver gangs,” impersonation, and paper leaks employed by organized groups for personal gain.
- National Oversight: A new High-Level National Technical Committee will oversee the development of secure online platforms and robust IT infrastructure for exams.
Rationale and Impact:
- The bill addresses the growing problem of organized cheating and paper leaks, which have disrupted exams and jeopardized the futures of (lakhs) students.
- It aims to deter criminal elements and reassure genuine candidates of fair and transparent examinations.