Rajeev Kumar (activist)


Rajeev Kumar was a Professor at the Indian Institute of Technology, Kharagpur who has reformed the Joint Entrance Examination by which the IITs admit undergraduate students, by introducing greater transparency into it. A recipient of the National RTI Award, 2010.
in 2011, a Supreme Court judgement called him "one of the many unsung heroes who help in
improving the system."
Since 2006, Rajeev Kumar has been using the Right to Information Act to get information about how the IITs fix the eligibility criteria of admission through the JEE.
A "protracted legal struggle" over years
with several tiers of the IIT administration, led to in 2010, the Delhi High Court ordering the IITs to reveal such information. Since 2012, every candidate gets a carbon copy of their paper, and the various cutoffs are announced.
Due to this activism he was suspended, then compulsorily retired and much later on, reinstated in his job at the IIT by the President of India.

Suspension for whistleblowing

In 2011, Kumar was suspended for damaging the reputation of IIT Kharagpur by reporting the massive copying that goes on in the institute, and for exposing a scam in the purchase of laptop computers. The institute had also illegally accessed Kumar's phone records.
This led to noted Supreme Court lawyer and activist Prashant Bhushan asking the MHRD Minister Kapil Sibal to ensure that whistleblowers like Rajeev should not be harassed. Despite letters from the MHRD and the Central Vigilance Commission in 2013, IIT Kharagpur did not revoke the suspension. In July 2012, the registrar of IIT wrote to the ministry
"saying the withdrawal of suspension of Prof. Kumar and resumption of duties
would adversely affect the academic atmosphere of the institute."
Finally, the suspension was lifted in May 2013,