His name is Dhiman Chakma.
He was born on November 15 1989 in a remote village in North Tripura. His father was a school teacher. He grew up with no access to coaching centres or urban resources.
He studied Computer Science at NIT Agartala. He began preparing for the UPSC on his own, through self-study. In 2019, on his first attempt, he secured All India Rank 722 and joined the Indian Forest Service.
Unwilling to stop, he appeared again in 2021 and secured All India Rank 482. He joined the IAS.
In January 2024 he was posted as Sub-Collector of Dharamgarh in Kalahandi district, Odisha.
On the night of June 9 2025, the Odisha Vigilance Department received a complaint from a local businessman who owned a stone crushing unit.
The businessman alleged that Chakma had demanded Rs 20 lakh from him, threatening to implicate him in false cases if the money was not paid. Vigilance officials laid a trap.
They caught Chakma red-handed at his official residence accepting Rs 10 lakh in cash. Chemical tests on his hands confirmed he had handled the money.
During searches of his residence, officials recovered Rs 47 lakh in cash for which he could offer no satisfactory explanation. Vigilance teams subsequently raided properties linked to him in Tripura and Himachal Pradesh.
He was presented before the Vigilance Court the next morning. The Odisha government suspended him the same day. He later secured bail from the High Court.
He cracked the UPSC twice without coaching. His story was shared in schools and homes as proof that the system could still reward the honest and the ordinary.
On June 9 2025, Odisha Vigilance found Rs 47 lakh in cash at his government residence.
He had no explanation for it.
He is now back in government service as Deputy Secretary. The criminal case is still in court.
No official explanation has been given for his reinstatement.
An officer caught with unexplained cash is back to Revenue Department, while the case against him moves slowly through a courtroom.
Follow for verified stories every Indian deserves to know.
@DrKamleshDarji1 Bluff.
I challenge you to earn handsome in corporates in tier 1 cities with only PG degree compared to DM holders. You'll be rejected and he/she will be preferred.
@MattooShashank Bhai. Look into our country and stop comparing it with other countries. Put efforts to make yourself strong enough to make the US bow down to India.
✅Top 10 Everyday Habits That Boost Happiness & Health
1. Morning sunlight
10 minutes can lift mood, improve sleep, and reset your brain’s clock.
2. Daily walk
Even 20–30 minutes walk improves blood flow, reduces stress, and sharpens focus.
3. Good sleep routine
Fixed sleep/wake times keep your brain stable and energetic.
4. Mindful eating
Slow, distraction-free meals improve digestion and prevent overeating.
5. Talking to someone you care about
Strengthens emotional health and reduces anxiety.
6. Deep breathing for 2 minutes
Instantly reduces stress by calming your nervous system.
7. Doing one act of kindness
Proven to release dopamine, the “feel-good” chemical.
8. Limiting screen time at night
Protects sleep quality and reduces mental fatigue.
9. Staying hydrated
Even mild dehydration can cause headaches and irritability.
10. Learning something new each day
Keeps your brain young, flexible, and resilient.
Small daily habits create big, long-term changes.
Choose health. Choose happiness.
Dr Sudhir Kumar
Neurologist, Hyderabad
What scam has been so normalized? The guilt-tripping of successful doctors.
I know a Rheumatologist in my city.
• Full Private Practice (No Govt post/salary)
• 15 years of education + 10 years of grind.
• Sees 100 patients/day (Purely based on patient satisfaction).
He once posted that his annual income was ₹1.5 Cr.
The result? He was bashed, called a "thief," and bullied until he deleted his account.
Compare this to a 22-year-old IIT graduate bagging a ₹1.5 Cr package.
Society’s reaction: "Inspiration," "Pride of India," "Deserves it."
If a techie earns it, it’s 'Success.'
If a doctor earns it, it’s 'Robbery.'
Making a doctor feel guilty for being compensated for their expertise is the biggest scam in Indian society.
The older I get, the more I realise how much my parents did for me. And how little I can do in return.
You can never fully repay your parents. All you can do is make sure their sacrifices weren’t in vain.
Beautiful..
Everytime I watch the birds flying i used to wonder why is the symmetry in their flying. Now I know.. it's beautiful how nature bless them with aerodynamics!
https://t.co/IvVj8TIkaG