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Rahul Gandhi's Accusations Against CBSE on Examination Costs and Errors

Monday, June 1, 2026
5 min read
Rahul Gandhi's Accusations Against CBSE on Examination Costs and Errors

Rahul Gandhi, the Leader of the Opposition in the Lok Sabha, dropped some heavy accusations on the Central Board of Secondary Education, or CBSE, on Monday. He claimed the board was just piling extra costs onto students to fix mistakes they made in the evaluations. He suggested the entire examination body was actually making money off its own errors.

It wasn't just abstract talk. He posted something on X where he threw out this line: “Beware of pickpockets – today they’re sitting inside CBSE.” He was talking about the fees students have to pay just to get their marks verified.

The details of the cost were pretty specific. Gandhi pointed out that if a mark was wrong because of a CBSE slip-up, students had to pay. He listed the charges: one hundred rupees per subject for a digital scan of the answer sheet. Another hundred for re-totalling the paper. And twenty-five rupees per question if they wanted a re-evaluation.

“A child might have to shell out up to two thousand rupees just to get their own answer sheet properly checked,” he said. It felt like an outrage.

He added that roughly four lakh students had actually filed these applications. He questioned the whole revenue stream generated by this whole process.

The criticism went beyond just the money. He hammered the evaluation system itself. He argued that errors were unavoidable, especially when everyone was scanning answer sheets using mobile phones. Students were left holding the bag for the mistakes made during the assessment.

He put it bluntly: “The mistake is CBSE’s. The punishment is the child’s. The earnings are the government’s.” That line hung there.

Accusing the authorities of turning education into some kind of business. He argued that when education stops being a service and starts being a business, mistakes don’t get fixed. They get multiplied. And our kids are paying the steepest price for it. Their time, their confidence, their whole future.

This criticism ramped up over the weekend, too. Rahul Gandhi intensified his pushback against Prime Minister Narendra Modi regarding the CBSE OSM controversy. He felt the concerns of those eighteen and a half lakh students affected by the messy answer-sheet scanning process were completely ignored.

He contrasted what the Prime Minister said during his monthly Mann Ki Baat with the silence on this issue. It felt deliberate.

In another post on X, he made that sharp comparison. The Prime Minister had time to talk about mangoes. He didn't have time for the 18.5 lakh children whose answer sheets got scanned incorrectly. Dharmendra Pradhan ji is still sitting in office. Modi ji’s silence? Gandhi called it complicity.

He even shared a video of him talking with some students. He commended them for being brave enough to speak out about this mess. He said things like, “Vedant and his friends are brilliant, brave young Indians who asked CBSE and the Modi government simple questions – but got insults instead of answers.”

This whole thing kicked off because of one student. Vedant, a Class 12 kid, posted something online. He claimed the Physics answer sheet uploaded by CBSE during the scanning process wasn't his. It started spreading fast. Other students followed suit with similar allegations. It just started with one complaint, and suddenly, it was this massive public outcry about how things were being handled.

Written by Gree News Team — Senior Editorial Board

Gree News Team covers international news and global affairs at Gree News. Our collective of senior editors is dedicated to providing independent, accurate, and responsible journalism for a global audience.

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