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Why Abhijeet Dipke Is Demanding Dharmendra Pradhan’s Resignation

A serious CJP explainer for readers who want the full context before the noise takes over.

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Quick answer: Abhijeet Dipke is demanding the resignation of Union Education Minister Dharmendra Pradhan because he says paper leaks, exam failures, student suicides and systemic negligence have damaged the future of more than one crore students across exams such as NEET, CBSE, CUET and SSC GD.

This is not only a CJP demand.

It is a student-accountability demand.

The central demand

In his latest Instagram video, Abhijeet Dipke said he is returning to India to demand Dharmendra Pradhan’s resignation.

He argued that paper leaks have destroyed the hard work of lakhs of students and that NEET students who died by suicide after the crisis deserve justice and accountability.

His statement was direct:

“Paper leak के कारण जिन NEET के बच्चों ने suicide की और जो लाखों students की मेहनत बर्बाद हुई है, उसके लिए तो धर्मेंद्र प्रधान को resign करना ही चाहिए.”

Why resignation is being demanded

Dipke’s argument is based on ministerial accountability.

If a national-level education and examination failure affects lakhs or crores of students, someone in power must take responsibility.

His point is not only that mistakes happened.

His point is that there appear to be no consequences for those mistakes.

The accountability line

One of the most important lines in Dipke’s video was:

“इतने बड़े blunder के बाद भी अगर education minister resign नहीं करते हैं तो इसका मतलब इस देश में accountability नाम की कोई चीज बची ही नहीं है.”

This is the core of the resignation demand.

CJP is saying that students cannot be the only ones who suffer consequences while ministers and institutions continue without responsibility.

The student numbers Dipke cited

Dipke said more than one crore students have been affected across major exams and education systems.

He cited:

  • 22 lakh NEET students
  • 17 lakh CBSE students
  • 16 lakh CUET students
  • 40 lakh SSC GD students

According to him, these students’ lives have been treated like a joke by the system.

Why NEET matters emotionally

NEET is not just another exam.

For many families, it represents years of coaching, fees, emotional pressure, relocation, loans, sacrifice and hope.

When paper leaks or exam failures happen, the damage is not only academic.

It is psychological, financial and social.

That is why Dipke’s demand has connected with students and parents.

Eight lakh signatures

Dipke also said that eight lakh children and supporters have signed the petition demanding accountability.

He said crores have supported the demand on social media and protests are happening in places such as Lucknow, Jaipur, Maharashtra and Delhi.

That matters because the demand is no longer just one person speaking from abroad.

It is becoming a public campaign.

Why students are anxious

Dipke said students are anxious and worried about their futures because of repeated failures in the exam system.

That anxiety is real for many young Indians.

When recruitment exams are delayed, papers leak, results are challenged or processes become uncertain, students lose time they cannot recover.

A year lost in the exam system is not just a year.

It can mean age-limit pressure, family pressure, financial stress and mental-health collapse.

The larger question: who pays the price?

This is the central moral question behind the resignation demand.

When the system fails, students pay the price.

When the paper leaks, students wait again.

When exams collapse, students study again.

When results are delayed, students explain again.

When institutions fail, students absorb the damage.

CJP is asking: why are consequences only for students?

Why this is bigger than one minister

Although the demand names Dharmendra Pradhan, the issue is bigger than one minister.

It is about whether Indian public institutions accept responsibility when young people’s futures are damaged.

If there is no accountability after exam failures, students learn a dangerous lesson: the system can fail them without consequence.

CJP’s framing

CJP is framing the resignation demand as a democratic and constitutional campaign.

Dipke is not calling for violence or disorder.

He is asking supporters to come together peacefully and demand accountability.

That distinction matters.

The protest is being presented as constitutional dissent, not chaos.

Why this article matters

This article is important because the CJP movement should not become only about Abhijeet Dipke’s airport arrival or possible arrest.

The real issue is student accountability.

The real question is whether India’s education system can fail lakhs of students without ministerial responsibility.

Source

This article is based on the transcript of Abhijeet Dipke’s latest Instagram video statement and the reel available here: Abhijeet Dipke’s Instagram video statement.

The cockroach record

The cockroach began as an insult.

Then it became a slogan.

Now it has become a demand:

Accountability for students.

CJP is saying that students cannot keep paying for the system’s mistakes.

If one crore students are affected, someone must answer.

That is why Dharmendra Pradhan’s resignation has become the centre of this campaign.

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