Not satisfied with government move, UPSC aspirants vow to continue fight

The civil services aspirants, who had been protesting against the CSAT format in Mukherjee Nagar for the past 25 days, will now hold protest at Jantar Mantar.

Not satisfied with government move, UPSC aspirants vow to continue fight
NEW DELHI: Not satisfied with the changes announced by the government in the UPSC exam, scores of civil services aspirants today vowed to continue their fight for "complete scrapping" of the CSAT paper and decided to shift their agitation to Jantar Mantar in central Delhi.

The civil services aspirants, who had been protesting against the CSAT format in Mukherjee Nagar of north Delhi for the past 25 days, will now hold protest at Jantar Mantar.

"We are not satisfied with Minister of State for Personnel Jitendra Singh's speech in Lok Sabha regarding CSAT. We demand complete scrapping of CSAT. We have decided to continue our fight from Jantar Mantar," Pawan, an UPSC aspirant who has been leading the protest, said.

The minister today announced in Parliament that English marks of CSAT-II will not be included for gradation or merit, and candidates of 2011, when CSAT was first introduced, may get another chance to appear for the test next year.

Pawan said this was not what the protesters have been demanding. "We never asked the BJP-led government to modify CSAT pattern. Instead, our demand is to abolish this test for the welfare of lakhs of students who had studied in Hindi medium," he added.

"Before elections, BJP had promised to scrap this test. The BJP-led central government has cheated lakhs of UPSC aspirants who had hoped that the new government would pay heed to their demand," he said.
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Meanwhile, RSS ideologue K N Govindacharya has requested the Lok Sabha Speaker to initiate action against the Union Public Service Commission (UPSC) Chairman and the Secretary of Department of Personnel and Training (DoPT) for violating 'Rajbhasha Sankalp', which was passed by both Houses of Parliament.

In 2011, the civil services exam pattern was changed by the UPSC without any mandate and "in violation of Rajbhasha Sankalp", he said. In his memorandum, Govindacharya demanded that UPSC exam papers be originally framed in Hindi, and then it be translated to English.

He also expressed his displeasure over non-action on his representation to Prime Minister Narendra Modi in this regard.
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