
2 min readJun 6, 2026 08:01 PM IST
Cockroach Janata Party founder Abhijeet Dipke with Social Activist Sonam Wangchuk at Jantar Mantar during protest, in New Delhi on Saturday. (Express Photo by Praveen Khanna)
At a protest aimed at the government, the popular education reform activist Sonam Wangchuk thanked it.
Addressing the Cockroach Janta Party’s demonstration over examination irregularities at Jantar Mantar on Saturday, Wangchuk credited the state for letting the agitation proceed. He called it “a major achievement” and “a victory for India and even for the government.” The government, he noted, had not stopped the protest. A day before, Wangchuk had urged on X, to make it “the most peaceful movement in India’s history.”
The CJP is a weeks-old digital movement triggered in response to the Chief Justice Surya Kant’s remarks last month on “those who attack the system”.
At the site, where hundreds of students and elderly supporters as well had gathered, Wangchuk said, “We hope going forward also this government allows such creative, constructive expressions.”
To the swelling crowd he said, “I would call this an appeal rather than a protest.” Adding, “We are not fond of protests… we have come to make an appeal. In a respectful democracy, we hope we do not have to raise slogans to be heard.”
Wangchuk pushed past the immediate demands of the exam aspirants around him. Education, he said, was “the first requirement,” and the system needed correcting so that students in both cities and villages received justice. The movement, he hoped, would not “remain limited to examinations alone” but lead to systemic reforms.
For Wangchuk, equality in the classroom was the real test of intent — and only a starting point, as he said, “The foundation of a ‘viksit Bharat’ lies not in Delhi’s private schools but in schools located in villages.”
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He added, “The children of all elected representatives should study in government schools.” Real change, he argued, would come only when the children of policymakers studied alongside everyone else’s.
He said he wanted the cause to widen across all ministries, and eventually to the environment.
“This is a responsibility that every citizen can share,” he said. “And ministers, of course, must take responsibility as well.”
View original source — Indian Express ↗
