Institutional Corruption And Blind Hate In India Turn An Innocent Student Asking For Correct Marks Into A Pakistani Traitor
May 29, 2026 Off By Sharp MediaVedant Shrivastava was a student in New Delhi who got shockingly low marks in his board exams. He asked the Central Board of Secondary Education for a copy of his physics paper. The paper sent to him belonged to someone else because the handwriting was totally different. When his brother complained on social media to get justice online mobs attacked them. The trolls saw the location on his profile was set to South Asia. They completely ignored the mistake of the board and called the student a Pakistani agent and a traitor.
Using The Pakistan Label To Hide Official Failures
This shows a toxic trick used in India today to silence honest people. Anyone who questions a broken government department is immediately called an enemy of the nation. These online mobs do not care about the future of a student. They use the Pakistani label to crush complaints and destroy reputations. This aggressive tactic protects lazy officials from blame by turning an exam error into a national security issue. Ordinary citizens are now terrified to ask for their rights.
The Shocking Numbers Behind Online Hate Campaigns
This internet bullying is a well planned system of abuse proven by clear facts. A report by Amnesty International called Troll Patrol India showed that the internet is highly dangerous for critics. Their data revealed that one out of every seven messages sent to public figures contained harsh abuse. People from minorities face the worst attacks. Individuals seen as minorities received over fifty five percent more abusive messages online and nearly twenty six percent of those messages had direct religious insults. The V Dem Institute also ranks India extremely high for political polarization driven by online lies.
Complete Collapse Of Accountability In Public Institutions
The behavior of the education board shows a total lack of honesty. The board refused to accept its blunder when the family first complained. They stayed silent while an angry online crowd terrorized an innocent teenager. The family had to fight publicly for days just to fix a simple error. The board only sent the correct paper after the issue became a huge public scandal. This proves that public offices only act when they face massive public shame.
Political Networks Funding Digital Armies To Attack Citizens
This exam issue quickly turned into a massive national political fight. Opposition leaders like Rahul Gandhi and Priyanka Chaturvedi condemned this toxic internet culture. They stated that political groups have built massive troll networks to attack citizens under the guise of patriotism. Experts note that since the elections of 2014 and 2019 political parties have spent millions of dollars to build digital armies. These coordinated accounts dominate social media trends and are used to destroy anyone who exposes system flaws.
The Total Destruction Of Free Speech Through Fear
The long term results of this digital madness are highly dangerous for society. When a simple word like South Asia is twisted to call a student a spy common sense is dead. This toxic environment kills free speech and breaks the trust between people and the state. The constant fear of being targeted by faceless internet accounts stops journalists and students from speaking up. Global reports show that the safety of people exposing system failures has dropped severely because they face digital threats before real physical danger.
Fighting Back Against Digital Terror To Protect Our Future
The horrible experience of this student is a loud warning about uncontrolled digital extremism. Public institutions easily hide their crimes when internet mobs act as aggressive guards. To save our society we must hold social media platforms responsible for hate campaigns. We must build transparent systems to solve citizen problems without exposing them to digital wolves. Society must reject the toxic weaponization of identity to make the public space safe again.
