The dark, fetid underbelly of India's medical examination system has been pried open like a rancid tin of pilchards, and the stench is now drifting across the English Channel. British universities, the bastions of tweed and moral superiority, have announced they will be monitoring the academic integrity of Indian students with the zeal of a hungover hawk eyeing a field mouse. It seems the Great Indian Brain Drain has been accompanied by a rather more dubious leakage: the systematic cheating on the NEET-PG exam.
Reports from Delhi suggest that the scandal has metastasized into a full-blown crisis, with hundreds of medical students potentially implicated in a web of bribery, leaked papers, and what can only be described as 'exam-fixing kiosks' operating with the efficiency of a chai wallah. The Indian government, in a display of bureaucratic flailing, has promised a 'thorough investigation' which, in the history of such promises, usually means a few desultory memos and a reshuffling of chairs.
Enter British universities, ever eager to police the morals of the Commonwealth. They have announced a 'monitoring regime' that will involve verifying the marks of Indian applicants with the meticulousness of a forensic accountant examining a politician's expenses. This is, of course, a noble endeavour, but one cannot help but detect a whiff of colonial condescension, as if the British Empire had never produced a single corrupt official or fiddled exam paper. But I digress, as is my wont.
The system, such as it is, was already a labyrinth of opaque procedures and caste-based reservations. Now, it is a circus with two rings: one for the cheats and one for the righteous enforcers. The students, caught in the middle, are left to wonder if their years of toil have been rendered worthless by the machinations of a few unscrupulous operators. And yet, the scandal has also revealed a deeper malaise: the commodification of medical education, where a degree is less a mark of competence and more a ticket to a lucrative career in the West.
In a statement that could have been penned by a chatbot with a degree in international relations, a spokesperson for the British Council said: 'We are committed to maintaining the highest standards of academic integrity and will work closely with Indian authorities to ensure a fair and transparent process.' This will, no doubt, involve many meetings, many cups of tea, and the eventual production of a glossy report that will gather dust in a filing cabinet in Whitehall.
Meanwhile, the real victims are the patients who will be treated by doctors whose qualifications may be as solid as a wet biscuit. The scandal has eroded trust in a system already buckling under the weight of a billion people's healthcare needs. But fear not, for the British are here, armed with spreadsheets and righteous indignation. They will sort it out, just as they sorted out the railways, the tea industry, and the eternal problem of Indian poverty. And when they are done, we can all raise a glass of Gordon's gin to the enduring power of Anglo-Indian co-operation, or what remains of it after the EU referendum.
But enough of my cynicism. Let us raise a cheer for the brave new world of transnational academic surveillance. Let us applaud the auditors, the data crunchers, and the integrity officers who will ensure that no Indian doctor ever again dares to cheat their way to a white coat. And let us weep for the poor, honest student who studied for years, only to be tarred with the brush of suspicion. For in the end, the scandal is not about a few cheats. It is about a system that has failed everyone: the students, the universities, and the patients.
This is Barnaby 'Biff' Thistlethwaite, signing off from the edge of sanity. I need a drink.