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Explained: Is the Telegram restriction in India necessary or disproportionate?

Explained: Is the Telegram restriction in India necessary or disproportionate?


3 minute read

The Indian government’s decision to temporarily restrict Telegram and disable its message editing feature marks an unprecedented escalation in its response to the NEET-UG 2026 paper leak controversy. 

Acting on recommendations from the National Testing Agency (NTA), the Ministry of Electronics and Information Technology (MeitY) has blocked access to the messaging platform until June 22 and ordered it to disable message editing in India until the end of the month. The measures are directly linked to the fallout from the cancellation of the NEET-UG 2026 examination, the first time the national medical entrance test has been scrapped since the NTA took over its administration in 2019. 

While authorities argue the restrictions are necessary to combat organised cheating networks and the spread of fabricated “paper leak” claims, the move has raised wider questions about intermediary liability, the government’s blocking powers under Section 69A of the Information Technology Act (IT Act), and whether the restrictions meet constitutional standards of necessity and proportionality.

IFF statement: The Internet Freedom Foundation (IFF) criticised the government’s action against Telegram in a statement on June 16, 2026, describing it as a “band-aid solution” that is both disproportionate and ineffective in addressing examination fraud. In a detailed statement, the organisation raised several concerns:

  • Questioning the legal basis: IFF argued that Section 69A allows the blocking of specific content, not entire platforms, and questioned the legal authority for disabling Telegram’s message-editing feature.
  • Arguing that less restrictive options existed: The group noted that the NTA itself credited channel, group and bot takedowns with containing the harm, suggesting targeted measures were already working.
  • Highlighting inconsistencies: IFF pointed to the NTA’s statements that no paper had leaked outside the secured examination chain and that exam security remained unaffected, arguing this weakens the case for a platform-wide restriction.
  • Warning of collateral impact: The organisation said the block affects lakhs of legitimate users, including students who rely on Telegram for educational purposes.
  • Questioning effectiveness: IFF argued that leaks originate within the examination system and that fraud networks can easily bypass platform blocks or migrate elsewhere.
  • Raising transparency concerns: The group criticised the government for not publishing the underlying MeitY order, arguing that affected parties cannot properly scrutinise or challenge the restriction.