The board examinations of the year 2022 are going on in Uttar Pradesh and high school and intermediate students are appearing in these examinations. In this sequence, a surprising case has come to light from Ballia district, where the claims of conducting mock-free examinations are being exposed. Today i.e. on March 29, Sanskrit examination of high school students is scheduled, but according to media reports, Solved copy of Sanskrit paper of high school is being sold in Ballia for Rs 500 to 1000.
The Government of Uttar Pradesh and the UP Board continuously claims to conduct mock-free exams. But the copycat mafia continues its gimmicks beyond these strictures. According to the exam list released by the UP Board, the Sanskrit subject exam was scheduled for March 29 for high school students. The Sanskrit paper was to be held from 8 am, but before the start of the examination, the Solve copy of Sanskrit started selling in Ballia.
According to the report, these Solve copies are of Sanskrit subject and they are being sold for 500 to 1000 rupees. The complicity of the Education Department and copying mafia is being told behind this whole episode. Due to all this, the claims of the UP government and the UP board appeared to be stacking up. The board talks about having many strict arrangements before the examinations, but the sale of solve copies of Sanskrit subject in Ballia is a big question mark.
The copying mafia is carrying out such works by flouting the claims of the government and the board. It is also being told that the examination was to be held on March 29 from 8 am, but from the late night of March 28, the paper started selling for five hundred and thousand rupees. This shows that the copying mafia is dominating the entire administrative staff and has broken into the education department.
It is to be known that even before this, copying has been dominating the mafia in Ballia. Due to which this time also a student of any other district has been banned from coming to Ballia and taking the board examination. After this strictness of the administration, the number of students appearing in the board exams has decreased continuously.