India's viral 'cockroach' youth movement takes to the streets of Delhi

WorldPolitics
6 Jun 2026 • 5:52 PM MYT
DPA International
DPA International

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Image from: India's viral 'cockroach' youth movement takes to the streets of Delhi
Indian Prime Minister Narendra Modi speaks during a press conference with Italian Prime Minister Giorgia Meloni after their meeting at Villa Doria Pamphilj. (is associated with: «India's viral 'cockroach' youth movement takes to the streets of Delhi») -/Italian Government/dpa

Hundreds of young people gathered in New Delhi on Saturday for a protest organized by the Cockroach Janta Party (CJP), a viral online movement, demanding the resignation of Education Minister Dharmendra Pradhan over alleged mismanagement of public examinations affecting millions of students.

The satirical campaign was started by US-based student Abhijeet Dipke after India's Chief Justice Surya Kant compared unemployed youth to "parasites and cockroaches." Kant later clarified that his remarks referred to people holding fake degrees, not unemployed graduates.

Launched on May 16, the CJP quickly gained traction online, attracting 22 million supporters on X before its handle was blocked in India following what the platform described as "a legal demand." Organizers soon created a new account, “Cockroach is Back.”

For now, the group’s primary demand is Pradhan’s resignation. Members point to recent controversies involving leaked medical college entrance exam papers and problems with a newly introduced digital correction process for school final examinations as evidence of a failing education system.

Hundreds of protesters, including school students, assembled at Delhi’s Jantar Mantar, carrying placards reading “Cockroach never die” and “How many times will there be a paper leak government?” Demonstrators chanted slogans like: “Bharat Mata ki jai” (victory to mother India), “Hum nahi darenge” (We will not be scared). Large numbers of police monitored the site.

Image from: India's viral 'cockroach' youth movement takes to the streets of Delhi
Devotees at Dashashwamegh ghat during Magh mela on a foggy and cold winter morning. (is associated with: «India's viral 'cockroach' youth movement takes to the streets of Delhi») Prabhat Kumar Verma/ZUMA Press Wire/dpa