The Recent Rollout of OSM By CBSE & Contract Award To Coempt Eduteck Shows Highest Level Of Corruption In CBSE, Investigation Must Start Under Court Monitoring From Sacking Chairman Of CBSE

In the scorching summer of 2026, when lakhs of bright-eyed Class 12 students across India should have been celebrating their hard-earned board results with dreams of IITs, medical colleges, and bright careers ahead, a dark shadow of betrayal has engulfed them instead. The much-hyped On-Screen Marking (OSM) system rolled out by the Central Board of Secondary Education (CBSE) — a digital evaluation platform meant to bring “transparency and efficiency” — has collapsed spectacularly into a nightmare of blurry scanned answer sheets, mismatched pages, tampered-looking marks, exposed AWS S3 buckets leaking entire answer scripts of 20 lakh students, and a re-evaluation portal hacked so badly that 50 children could manipulate fees from Rs 1 to Rs 68,000. At the heart of this man-made disaster lies the shocking award of this multi-crore contract to Hyderabad-based Coempt Eduteck Pvt Ltd, a company that rebranded from the infamous Globarena Technologies — the very firm whose 2019 Telangana Intermediate fiasco left over three lakh students failed overnight, triggered heart-wrenching suicides, massive protests, and eventual contract cancellation. This is not mere “technical glitches” or “teething problems.” This is the highest level of institutional corruption, negligence, and criminal indifference displayed by CBSE and its overseers, playing Russian roulette with the futures of India’s next generation.
Why CBSE is playing around with the future of the students Imagine a 17-year-old who sacrificed sleep, family time, and mental peace for two straight years, only to receive scanned copies where her neatly written answers appear as smudged ghosts because the tender-diluted scanning resolution was slashed from a clear 300 DPI to a pathetic 200 DPI to accommodate a favoured vendor. Thousands of students are now flooding re-evaluation portals, discovering entire pages missing, subject codes swapped, or marks that do not match their physical sheets. The teen ethical hacker Nisarga Adhikary exposed how anyone could download all scanned scripts, question papers, and even evaluators’ details due to basic AWS misconfigurations — a vulnerability so elementary it screams deliberate sabotage or criminal incompetence. The re-evaluation portal itself was hit by a “malicious attack” on day one, leaving desperate students stranded for days. CBSE’s response? First denial (“it was only a test site”), then vague admissions (“vulnerabilities contained”), while lakhs of families spiral into anxiety, depression, and lost opportunities for admissions abroad or competitive exams. This is not an accident; it is CBSE toying with young lives as if they were disposable data points in a corrupt experiment.
Why India’s Civil Servants Like Chairman Of CBSE Are Always On The Top In Corruption At the helm sits Chairman Rahul Singh, a 1996-batch IAS officer of the Bihar cadre, whose two-year extension was rubber-stamped even as these scandals brewed. India’s civil servants, especially in education and examination bodies, have perfected the art of unaccountable power. Shielded by opaque bureaucracy, political patronage, and the “transfer-posting” mafia, they treat public institutions as personal fiefdoms. Why do they top corruption lists year after year? Because there is zero real deterrence — no asset seizures, no swift prosecutions, only cosy extensions and post-retirement sinecures. In this case, the chairman presided over a tender process where eligibility norms were repeatedly diluted between May and August 2025 until Coempt could magically qualify. CMMI certification lowered from Level 5 to 3, blacklisting clauses softened from “ever blacklisted” to “currently blacklisted,” penalty clauses for scanning errors mysteriously vanished, and turnover thresholds barely met. A Class 12 student researcher, Sarthak Sidhant, meticulously documented these 15+ changes in a public blog that exposed how the system was rigged. Yet the chairman’s office remains silent on why a company with Globarena’s blood-stained track record — untested software, mass result disasters, fake documentation charges now at Nagpur University — was handed the keys to the nation’s most important exam evaluation. This is the classic Indian babu syndrome: power without responsibility, corruption without consequence.
The investigation must be done under court monitored committee and must initiate by terminating the services of chairman of CBSE Enough of internal inquiries and “expert committees” that whitewash everything. The only way to restore even a shred of faith is an immediate, court-monitored Special Investigation Team (SIT) under the supervision of the Supreme Court or a High Court bench. The very first step of this probe must be the summary termination of services of CBSE Chairman Rahul Singh. He cannot be allowed to sit in office, destroy evidence, or influence witnesses while lakhs of students suffer. Sacking him on day one will send a thunderous message that no bureaucrat is above the law when children’s futures are at stake. The SIT must seize all tender files, email trails, meeting minutes, and bank records of Coempt Eduteck and every CBSE official involved. Polygraph tests, asset audits, and forensic analysis of the OSM portal code (which suspiciously appeared on GitHub only during pilot stages) are non-negotiable. Anything less will be another cover-up.
The education minister Dharmendra Pradhan Must resign from the post Union Education Minister Dharmendra Pradhan has publicly said “I hold myself accountable” and “I take responsibility.” Words are cheap when the damage is already done. As the political head, he failed spectacularly in oversight. He allowed a known controversial vendor to be awarded the contract despite red flags screaming from Telangana. He watched the security lapses, the tender dilutions, and the student suicides-level stress build up without intervening. His ministry’s “student-centric” claims ring hollow when parents are protesting on streets and Congress leaders like Rahul Gandhi are demanding judicial probes. Pradhan must resign immediately. His continuation in office is an insult to every affected family. Only a resignation followed by his appearance before the court-monitored probe will begin the healing.
The award of the contract to Coempt Eduteck Shows Highest Level Of Corruption In CBSE This single decision reeks of the highest level of corruption. First tender — nobody qualifies. Second and third — criteria magically relaxed exactly to let Coempt clear the technical bar while TCS and others were marginalised. A company linked to a 2019 disaster that ruined 9.74 lakh Telangana students’ lives, caused 18-23 suicides, led to firings and court cases, is rebranded and rewarded with a national contract worth crores. Allegations of fake documentation at Nagpur University, poor execution in Odisha — all ignored. Scanning quality compromised, security diluted, blacklisting clauses watered down. Who benefited? Whose palms were greased? Whose relatives or political connections sit in Coempt’s ownership? The trail of unanswered questions in investigative reports points to a quid pro quo so blatant it would shame even the most hardened scamsters. This is not procurement; this is loot of the education system.
People taking salaries from the tax payers money are accountable and answerable Every single rupee that pays the salaries, perks, pensions, and security of CBSE officials, the Chairman, and the Education Minister comes from the hard-earned taxes of ordinary Indians — the same farmers, shopkeepers, and salaried middle-class whose children are now suffering. These public servants are not royalty; they are servants of the people. They owe absolute accountability. Hiding behind press releases, blaming “ethical hackers” for exposing truths, or calling criticism “political” is treason against the taxpayer. They must be made to answer in open court, under oath, with their assets frozen if needed. Public service is a sacred trust — they have violated it in the most heartbreaking manner possible.
No one has the right to play around with the future of the next generation No bureaucrat, no minister, no private contractor, no political party has the divine right to gamble with the dreams, mental health, and life chances of India’s youth. These Class 12 students are not statistics; they are sons and daughters who represent our nation’s tomorrow. When institutions meant to nurture them instead become casinos of corruption, the social contract breaks. The outrage we see on social media, the tears of parents, the sleepless nights of toppers who scored lower than expected — this must translate into systemic revolution. Immediate sacking of the Chairman, resignation of the Minister, court-monitored CBI/CBI-like probe with daily public updates, blacklisting of Coempt forever, and full compensation plus grace marks/re-exams for affected students are the bare minimum.
India’s students have spoken through their pain. The time for polite editorials is over. The time for ruthless accountability has begun. Sack the Chairman today. Force the Minister to resign tomorrow. Launch the court-monitored investigation this week. Anything less, and the next generation will remember 2026 not as the year of results, but as the year when the system declared war on its own children. The future refuses to be played with anymore.


