New Delhi:Congress leader Shashi Tharoor faced heavy backlash from the Uttar Pradesh BJP clan after sharing an examination paper sheet, where the student described UP as a state where answers are known in advance, late on the night of June 22.
The Post:On June 22, Tharoor took to his X handle and posted an image, captioning it to be 'Shandar#parikshapecharcha'. The image was of a question paper in which was asked in Hindi, "What is called Uttar Pradesh?" The answer was: "a state where uttar (meaning answers) are known before the exam." The caption is a direct jab at Prime Minister Narendra Modi's initiative to interact with students.
The Thiruvananthapuram MP's post was a direct attack on the Centre over multiple cases of paper leaks in state-level and all-India examinations. The post also reflects Tharoor's mockery at the irregularities in competitive examinations like NEET-UG.
Alleged irregularities in the exam have prompted the government to order a CBI investigation. Amid the row, the government has postponed three other all-India exams, triggering a sharp response from Opposition parties.
24 lakh students took the exam, but soon after that reports of alleged irregularities came to notice, forcing the government to order a CBI inquiry. Opposition parties responded sharply when the administration postponed three more all-India exams in the midst of the controversy.
BJP Leaders Criticise Post: Mr Tharoor's post, however, has drawn severe criticism in Uttar Pradesh, with BJP leaders accusing him of insulting the state. Union Minister Jitin Prasada on Sunday, June 23, said that he did not see the humour in "running down my state and its people by stereotyping them with such condemnable remarks". He also said such an insult to UP was "deplorable and must be condemned in strongest words".
Rajeev Chandrashekar, a former Union Minister, soon weighed in, terming the post to be shameless crass politics of shaming fellow Indians. "Shameless crass politics of shaming other fellow Indians - that's the Congress way, ably demonstrated by this self-titled Global citizen. It was just a few months ago, another of Cong 'global citizens' Pitroda described Indians as Africans, Chinese, Middle eastern etc. Runs deep in the Cong DNA, this type of superiority complex," he wrote.