India, Cockroach Janta
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The Cockroach Janta Party said its website and social media accounts were taken down on Saturday. The claim drew fresh online backing for the student-led satire movement born from anger over exams and unemployment.
Asianet Newsable on MSN
'Cockroach Janta Party' scam: Ludhiana police alert on fraud links
Ludhiana Police have issued an alert against a new cyber fraud using the name 'Cockroach Janta Party'. Scammers send malicious links that compromise mobile devices, giving hackers access to banking details and enabling financial theft.
Cockroach Janta Party founder Abhijeet Dipke claims crackdown on the party follows their campaign for Education Minister Pradhan's resignation amid hacking incidents.
India’s viral Cockroach Janta Party movement has now inspired similar satirical political pages in Pakistan, with youth-driven meme campaigns rapidly gaining attention online.
A brewing affordability crisis, rising youth unemployment and a flippant remark calling young people “cockroaches” by the country’s Chief Justice have triggered a spontaneous political movement among India’s Gen Z that has satirically embraced the insult and garnered more than 15 million followers on social media.
Abhijeet Dipke, founder of the satirical online platform Cockroach Janta Party, on Saturday claimed that his Instagram account and the party’s social media pages had been hacked days after the campaign went viral across digital platforms.
Cockroach Janta Party founder claims crackdown after losing social media access while demanding Education Minister's resignation over NEET-UG paper leak.
What started as an online satire campaign later became a broader discussion of digital dissent and growing frustration among young people.
3hon MSN
Swatting the roaches: Now Cockroach Janata Party website blocked, after action on X & Insta handles
The platform was launched in mid-May 2026 by digital creator Abhijeet Dipke as a hyper-viral satirical political movement. Defining itself as the "Voice of the Lazy & Unemployed," it uses AI-generated imagery and dark humor to channel Gen-Z frustrations regarding exam paper leaks,