A dangerous pattern is emerging across Bharat. It begins with real grievances, such as joblessness, broken institutions, and failed promises. However, it then mutates into political theatre. The faces change, the slogans change, but the script remains the same: ignite youth frustration, pour fuel through slogans, and turn the agitation into a weapon against ruling governments.
Stage 1 was attacking ECI. Congress scion Rahul Gandhi presented a PowerPoint presentation without proof to malign the Election Commission and sow doubts in the minds of the naive.
Stage 2 comes from two places.
Sonam Wangchuk’s personal collapse morphed into a “statehood struggle,” and Uttarakhand exam leaks triggered protests, which were branded as a “Gen Z movement.” If Bharat fails to recognize this escalation, the next stages could engulf more states in engineered unrest.
Bharat’s Regime Change Stage Begins in Ladakh
Sonam Wangchuk has long been exposed as a Deep State stooge and a symbol of opportunism in Bharat. His Himalayan Institute of Alternatives Ladakh (HIAL) was gifted 60 hectares of government land in 2018. Here, he and his wife promised to create a world-class alternative university. The deal was simple: ₹14 crore upfront and construction in two years. Seven years later, the project has collapsed:
- ₹37 crore unpaid dues to the Ladakh administration.
- No construction or university in sight!
- No UGC or AICTE recognition, leaving 400+ students of Bharat left with worthless diplomas.
- Complaints of financial mismanagement and lease violations.
Instead of accountability, Wangchuk chose agitation. His hunger strikes, padyatras, and Sixth Schedule demands always coincided with elections or international events. He even attended a “climate conference” in Pakistan just before reigniting protests. To many analysts, the move reeks of foreign footprints.
Critics now say Wangchuk perfected the script: take a personal failure, repackage it as a public cause, mobilize sympathy, and attack the BJP government – Stage 2 Operation Begins.
Uttarakhand’s Paper Leak Storm Morphs Into Fake Gen-Z Protests
Over 22,000 aspirants appeared for the UKSSSC recruitment exam — a lifeline for jobs as Patwaris, BDOs, and government clerks. By afternoon, leaked pages of the paper spread on WhatsApp. Within 48 hours, the police arrested Khalid Malik, a junior engineer, and his sister Sabia.
CM Pushkar Singh Dhami called it “Nakal Jihad” – claiming a mafia of coaching cartels and corrupt insiders trying to destroy the future of Uttarakhand’s youth.
He promised to “bury the copying mafia underground” and deliver justice to the youth of Uttarkhand. Yet, distrust ran deep:
- The Haridwar exam center where Khalid sat had no jammers in his classroom, a glaring administrative lapse.
- Similar leaks had rocked Uttarakhand in 2021, leading to the introduction of strict anti-cheating laws. However, the system still failed to prevent paper leaks!
- Over 22,000 contractual workers remain unregularised; recruitment tests for police, forest, PWD, and irrigation have been delayed for years.
For students of bharat who had spent months preparing, sometimes borrowing money for coaching, the leak was not just cheating – it was betrayal.
The Hijacking of Youth Anger
As seen in 2020, protests usually begin as genuine outrage. But within days, the slogans changed. What started as “Justice for aspirants” became “Paper Chor, Gaddi Chhod.” For Ladakh students, it becomes “Aazadi Sloganeering”
That shift tells its own story:
- Congress leaders activate their local networks to fuel political unrest.
- Left-leaning activists amplified protests on social media, branding it a “Gen-Z Protests.”
- Youth groups suddenly find themselves marching shoulder to shoulder with political workers.
This is no longer about one exam leak. It is also not about HIAL or Ladakh’s statehood. It is about hijacking the anger of youth and converting it into a street movement to corner the BJP government. The resemblance to protests in Bangladesh, Nepal, and Indonesia’s student uprisings is hard to ignore.
In each case, real issues like education and unemployment were used as fuel for regime-change-style campaigns.
Stage 2 Alert: A Script in Motion
From Wangchuk in Ladakh to youth in Uttarakhand, the protest playbook is clear:
- Exploit genuine grievances (failed institute, paper leak).
- Magnify anger through slogans and social media.
- Shift the focus from accountability to anti-government.
- There are times when there are protests around elections or key political moments.
The results are devastating: trust erodes, students lose faith in institutions, and politics feeds on chaos.
The danger of Stage 2 is escalation. Issues of Uttarakhand and Ladakh need addressing with speed, transparency, and justice. Otherwise, other states will burn in similar fake protests. Kashmir will burn in terror-funded fires, Bihar will burn in casteist flames, Manipur shall seige under Kiki arms, Karnataka will see language wars, and more.
Stage 3 flashpoints shall soon emerge in Bharat if the flames of fake protests are not arrested today!


