[ad_1]

Alarm bells should be ringing at visuals emerging from different parts of Bihar and Uttar Pradesh this week. While mainstream media have largely ignored or downplayed clashes between unemployed youth and the police, they are ominous. The youth were demanding cancellation of results declared by the Railway Recruitment Board of tests held to fill up non-technical posts. They alleged the results showed large scale duplication. Several candidates were shown to have ‘passed’ more than once, some as many as six times, arousing their suspicion of foul play. At best it indicated incompetence and at worst duplicity. The frustrated youth gave vent to their anger by setting train engines and bogeys on fire, by putting up obstacles on railway tracks, holding up trains. Typically, while ministers, politicians and bureaucrats were nowhere to be seen, armed policemen, Government Railway Police and the Railway Protection Force were deployed to deal with the agitated youth. The Railway Ministry issued a statement, warning the agitating youth that they would be debarred from Railway jobs for the rest of their lives. Better sense prevailed only after three days of sustained violence, when the Railway Board reluctantly agreed to set up a committee to examine the grievances. By asking the committee to submit its report six weeks later in March, the Railway Board however sent out the unfortunate message that it was merely buying time till the state elections get over. Neither the violence nor the distrust augur well for the country. While unemployment has been a ticking time bomb for past several years, the Government has been busy window dressing and fudging the data. The Prime Minister famously said that those frying pakodas and selling the savouries by the roadside were also employed. The Haryana chief minister this month threatened to take police action against the Centre for Monitoring Indian Economy (CMIE) for releasing inconvenient data on unemployment. It is time for both these gentlemen to realise that unemployment is not a law-and-order problem.

[ad_2]

Source link