Interviews for government jobs in 23 states and 8 union territories of the country will no longer be conducted.
Interviews
for government jobs in 23 of the country's 28 states and eight Union
Territories, including the newly formed Jammu and Kashmir and Ladakh,
have now been scrapped. Union Minister Jitendra Singh gave this
information.
Interviews in Group B and C closed from 2016
According to information provided by the Ministry of Personnel and
Training, Singh said that the arrangement for interviews for Group B
(Non-Gazetted) and Group C posts in the Central overnment has been
abolished since 2016. He said that PM Modi had in 2015 talked of
removing interviews from exams from Lalkilla and giving jobs on the
basis of written exams.
Interview removal process completed
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Singh said that on the advice of PM Modi, the personnel and training
department has completed the process of removing the interview system
from central government jobs within three months of considering the
matter. It has been implemented on January 1, 2016.
Interviews will not be held in 23 states and 8 union territories
He said that Gujarat and Maharashtra have accepted the rule very
quickly. So the other state showed reluctance to implement this soon.
However, now the system of not conducting interviews from the
examinations of 23 states and 8 Union Territories has been adopted.
Interview
for Group-B (non-gazetted) and Group-C posts in Central government jobs
has been abolished in 23 states and eight Union Territories (UTs) so
far -- an exercise that started with effect from January 1, 2016.
All
the eight UTs of India, including newly created Jammu and Kashmir and
Ladakh, are among the regions along with 23 out of the 28 states of the
country have so far followed Prime Minister Narendra Modi's call which
he made from the rampart of the Red Fort on the occasion of Independence
Day on August 15, 2015.
It is among some of the
path-breaking reforms brought by the Department of Personnel and
Training (DoPT), a statement from the Ministry of Personnel, Public
Grievances and Pensions said quoting Union Minister Jitendra Sing
Singh
recalled that Prime Minister Narendra Modi had suggested in 2015 the
abolition of interview and making job selection totally on the basis of
written test, because "whenever an interview call was received by a
candidate, his entire family would get disturbed with apprehension and
anxiety".
On a quick follow-up to the Prime Minister's advice,
the minister said, the DoPT undertook an expeditious exercise and within
three months completed the entire process to announce abolition of
interview for recruitment in Central government with effect from January
1, 2016.
However, Singh said that while some states like
Maharashtra and Gujarat were quick to implement this rule, there were
other states which were quite reluctant to abolish the conduct of
interview for Central government jobs.
The job was messed up in interviews
The statement said that the system has proved to be very effective in
removing the interview system to bring transparency in the recruitment
process for candidates preparing for competitive examinations. There
were frequent allegations that interview marks were being manipulated on
a large scale for these jobs. And a large amount of cash was paid in
return.
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