Indian Army defends testing on the seat of recruits’ pants

A regional Indian Army recruiting office has defended the practice of making recruits sit entrance exams in their pants, claiming the practice is not unusual.
Fri, 4 Mar 2016

A regional Indian Army recruiting office has defended the practice of making recruits sit entrance exams in their pants, claiming the practice is not unusual.

Earlier this week, Recruiter reported in the Indian city of Muzaffarpur, last Sunday, around 1,150 candidates for the post of clerks in the army were ordered to strip down to their pants in an open field to prevent cheating.

Digital website Catch News reports that the army’s zonal recruiting office (ZRO) for Bihar and Jharkhand, Danapur claims there is nothing unusual about the practice – adding its use dates back to the British Raj.

And according to Hindustan Times, the ZRO report also claims candidates do not object to the practice...

  • Want to comment on this story? The Comment box is at the bottom of the page. Sorry for the glitch but just scroll right down and share your opinions!

 

Cross-continent MoU could boost environmental health profession amid recruitment struggles

An agreement has been signed, which could help boost recruitment of environmental health officers (EHOs) globally.

Contracts 8 May 2025

NEW TO THE MARKET: 5-9 MAY 2025

This week’s new launches include: Heidrick & Struggles, Matrix, ProdigyPB, Project Brains

New to Market 6 May 2025

Humly acquires London-based education recruiter

Digital education recruitment platform Humly has finalised the purchase of London-based supply agency Future Education.

Contracts 1 May 2025

NHS Trust plans to cut jobs and agency staff

The BBC reports today [30 April 2025] that the North-West Anglia NHS Foundation Trust is planning job cuts, as well as cutting its expenditure on bank and agency staff.

30 April 2025
Top