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A hunger strike interrupted: What Wangchuk’s hospitalisation says about India’s democracy

By Vikas Meshram* 
Sonam Wangchuk’s hunger strike has reached a dramatic and troubling turning point. After more than twenty days of fasting at Delhi’s Jantar Mantar, the 59‑year‑old activist was removed from the protest site early Saturday morning and taken to Safdarjung Hospital. According to Delhi Police, the action was taken “in accordance with the orders of the High Court and on expert medical advice due to the deteriorating health condition of Sonam Wangchuk.” 
This moment — the forced removal of a peaceful protester whose health had become critical — is not just an administrative decision. It is a mirror held up to the state, reflecting its priorities, its anxieties, and its silences.
A Court’s Warning, A Government’s Reluctance
Two days earlier, the Delhi High Court had directed the Centre and Delhi government to conduct daily clinical checks and ensure “anything and everything should be done to protect Wangchuk’s life.” Doctors had already described his condition as an emergency, warning of possible organ failure. 
Yet the government’s political leadership remained conspicuously absent. No senior minister visited him. No official statement acknowledged the gravity of a man starving himself to highlight systemic failures in the country’s examination system.
A Protest Interrupted, Not Silenced
Police say Wangchuk is conscious and stable. But the symbolism of his removal is unmistakable. Protesters attempted to resist, leading to a brief commotion, though police claim they exercised restraint. They have now appealed to demonstrators to vacate Jantar Mantar. 
The Cockroach Janata Party (CJP), which organised the protest, has vowed to continue its agitation. Their planned march to Parliament on 20 July remains on schedule. Opposition leaders — including Pawan Khera, Dimple Yadav, and Arvind Kejriwal — visited Wangchuk in recent days, urging him to end his fast. 
But the larger question remains: Why did it take a man’s near‑collapse for the state to act?
The NEET Crisis and a Generation’s Anger
The hunger strike is rooted in a crisis that has shaken millions of families: the alleged NEET paper leak, repeated irregularities, and the suicides of students driven to despair. More than fifteen young people reportedly took their own lives due to the chaos surrounding the exam. Lakhs were forced to retake it under immense psychological strain.
Between 2021 and 2026, over ninety NEET‑related cases have surfaced. This year alone, twenty‑three lakh students appeared for the exam. Yet the government has not offered a clear explanation for the failures that led to this tragedy. The Prime Minister’s Office — known for responding swiftly even to minor incidents — has maintained complete silence.
Is the death of nearly twenty students so insignificant that it warrants no acknowledgement?
A Movement Born of Insult and Injustice
The Cockroach Party emerged after the Chief Justice of India compared protesting youth to “cockroaches.” What began as satire — a student in Boston asking online what would happen if “all the cockroaches came together” — became a nationwide mobilisation. Thousands rallied, transforming mockery into solidarity.
The movement may not yet have institutional power, but its moral force is undeniable.
Media Silence: A Democratic Failure
Mainstream media has shown astonishing indifference. Students have braved heat, rain, and police pressure for weeks. Some hunger strikers have been hospitalised. Yet coverage remains minimal. Without social media, this movement would have remained invisible.
The same media that eagerly broadcasts crowds during the Prime Minister’s foreign trips cannot see the youth gathering in the nation’s capital. In a democracy that prides itself on openness, this silence is not just surprising — it is shameful.
A Crisis of Policy and Accountability
The NEET scandal has raised deeper questions about India’s education policy. The government promises computer‑based exams by 2027, but only sixty per cent of government schools currently have computers. What happens to students in the remaining forty per cent?
Public trust in entrance examinations has eroded. Repeated leaks and irregularities have shaken parents’ faith. Policymakers must restore this trust through transparent reforms and accountability.
Dialogue Is Not Weakness
Democracy demands that those in power listen — even to dissenters. Prolonged neglect only deepens distrust. A hunger strike carries moral and medical dimensions; the government must protect the protester’s life while respecting his right to dissent.
Dialogue does not require accepting every demand. Protesters too must engage constructively. A credible committee and a time‑bound roadmap could rebuild trust.
Above all, the government must recognise the human dimension of this movement. Wangchuk’s deteriorating health — now serious enough to require hospitalisation — should concern every citizen. The cost of administrative indifference must not be paid with his life.
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*Contact: vikasmeshram04@gmail.com

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