Supporters of the viral Cockroach Janta Party (CJP) banged steel plates with spoons in a protest to demand the resignation of the education minister over allegations of examination irregularities and repeated paper leaks.
The protest near Parliament in New Delhi by hundreds of students and young supporters of the nascent movement added to the pressure on Prime Minister Narendra Modi’s government while also seeking wider support among Indians.
Authorities deployed heavy security and police used cameras and drones to monitor the protest.
Some carried placards and others banged plates, their noise cutting through the crowd protesting and demanding the resignation of Education Minister Dharmendra Pradhan.
The banging of plates appeared to satirise Modi’s call for Indians to step onto balconies and rooftops and bang utensils in solidarity with frontline health workers during the peak of the Covid-19 pandemic in 2020.

CJP founder Abhijeet Dipke, a political communications strategist and Boston University student, urged supporters on social media to bring plates and spoons on Saturday.
“There is a virus called Dharmendra Pradhan that has to be removed,” he told the crowd, adding that the CJP was open to talks with the government if Pradhan stepped down.
“This is just the beginning. If Dharmendra Pradhan doesn’t resign or if no action is taken regarding this issue, this protest will not end here,” said a CJP supporter, Deepak Kumar.
The exam paper for a nationwide medical programme was leaked last month through social media app Telegram.
Authorities subsequently postponed the exam and also temporarily banned Telegram in India. The government says the leak is under investigation.
“We study in poverty, live in poverty for 24 hours everyday, for years at length, and after that our (exam) papers get leaked. Will I not get angry at this?” said student Vicky Kumar.
The movement emerged in May, after Supreme Court judge Surya Kant’s remarks comparing some unemployed youth to “cockroaches” triggered outrage.
Supporters embraced the term as a symbol of resilience, helping the group amass more than 22 million followers on Instagram.
The movement’s message has since expanded to include concerns over unemployment, rising living costs and government accountability. — AP
