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HomeStoriesRead UPSC Board Interview of Abhiram G Sankar IAS, Rank-4

Read UPSC Board Interview of Abhiram G Sankar IAS, Rank-4

Abhiram G Sankar secured the 4th rank in the 2011 Civil Services Examination, this engineering graduate has topped the Civil Services list in Kerala. And he did it in his first attempt. And the first position was occupied by S Divyadarshini, a law graduate.

Being an IAS officer gives a person an enormous opportunity and immense pleasure to work in various fields and contribute to the overall betterment of human lives.

Abhiram says, ” success in the civil service exam is not related to marks scored in school or college exams. If one is determined and ready to do hard work, then one can surely succeed in this exam. Hardwork, strong determination and well planned strategy will definitely result in success”.

Marks Obtained by Abhiram G Sankar

 Total Marks  Marks Obtained
Total (Written)  2000  1121
 Interview  300  195
 Total  2300  1316  (57.22%)

Family

Abhiram’s father Mr Girisankar R is a Manager at Federal Bank. His mother Mrs Meena Sankar is a homemaker and has a younger brother Akshay G Sankar is a B.Tech student.

This serious and sincere person from Kerala credits his success to his parents, teachers and God.

Must Read: 10 UPSC Questions With Explanation – 2009 IAS Exam Paper

Educational Background

Abhiram G. Sankar had his primary schooling from Sree Chithira Thirunal Residential Central School, Kunnathukal, Trivandrum. And he completed his secondary schooling 12th from Arya Central School, Trivandrum. He then did his B.Tech in Computer Science from Thangal Kunju Musaliar College of Engineering, Kollam in Kerala in the year 2009.

Optional Paper

Abhiram G Sankar opted for Geography & Political Science & International Relations as his optional paper. He chose Geography because he has interest in this subject since his school days and also due to his interest in wildlife and travel. And opted Political Science as he has natural interest in International Relations.

Attempts

Abhiram G Sankar secured a Civil Service berth at the very first attempt and has brought new hopes in young aspirants of the state to fulfil their dream and achieving their goals.

Don’t Miss: UPSC Topper Interview – Alok Ranjan Jha, Rank 1 Civil Services

Suggestions for future Aspirants

  • One should always select an optional paper based on factors like interest, availability of guidance & study material etc. It is best to go through the syllabus & previous years’ question papers before selecting.
  • NCERT books & standard texts are the basic sources of information required.
  • Don’t give half-hearted attempts, try to give your best in the first attempt.
  • Should read newspaper regularly and “The Hindu” is the most important.
  • Prepare your own notes and revise the self-made notes at least once in a month.
  • Practice regular tests and go through the previous question paper. As practice makes a man perfect.

UPSC Board Interview of Abhiram G Sankar

Abhiram G Sankar entered the room, greeted the members & stood till he was offered the seat. Thanked the chairperson Rajni Razdan (RR) & sat down smiling.

RR: What’s your name?
Me: Abhiram G Sankar

M2: Born in Tamil Nadu, but staying in Kerala?
Me: yes sir, my family is settled in Kerala.

RR: So, which is the country sharing longest border with India?
Me: Bangladesh.

RR: The shortest?
Me: Afghanistan.

RR: Ok, Tell me about the McMahon Line.
Me: It’s the line dividing India & China, but not accepted by china as such. It was signed in the early 1900s by Treaty of Tibet. (I made a mistake by unintentionally mentioning the year & name of treaty.)

RR: Which treaty & year?
Me: Repeated the same, but doubtfully.

RR: It was in Shimla, in 1913. Who were the parties to the treaty?
Me: British India & Tibet.

RR: And one more?
Me: Don’t know.

RR: Myanmar.
Me: Thanked her.

RR: What is Radcliff line?
Me: Line dividing India & Pakistan.

RR: Who drew it & when?
Me: 1947 by Radcliff

RR: What are the issues between India & Pakistan?
Me: gave a list – borders, Siachen, sir creek, 26/11, water sharing, fishermen & prisoners etc.

RR: Suppose you are SDM of a district Abhiram G Sankar, and are traveling. You see an accident on the road. How will you respond? 
Me: I’ll stop on the spot, and get to know exactly what happened. Then call the ambulance or police station. If the above vehicles are not available, then take the injured in any other available vehicle.

RR: What is so special with your car that you will not take the injured in your car first? Why wait for ambulance /police? Is your prestige more important or the person’s life?
Me: (I was stunned briefly, as it did not occur to me while answering that an SDM would be traveling in his/her own car. But I quickly recovered & said,). The person’s life is most important. I should have thought of my own car first. I apologise for my mistake.

RR sat with the same emotionless expression from beginning till end of her question time. Now she signaled to another member, locked her palms together, placed them to her forehead & slept leaning on the table.

Important: IAS Topper Shena Aggarwal (Rank 1) – PMT Topper, AIIMS Doctor, 12th Topper, IRS

M1: You are from Kerala. How is geography advantageous to Kerala?
Me: Another list – rich & productive coastal alluvium, water resources, blessed by monsoon, fisheries, plantation sector, forests, ports etc.

M1: What about tourism?
Me: Yes sir, that too depends on Kerala’s unique geography.

M1: Since you are a computer science graduate, tell me what is cyber crime?
Me: (Didn’t know the exact definition) It refers to the various illegal activities performed in today’s IT-linked world like phishing, hacking, fraudulent info, theft of data etc.

M1: How will you use computer science in development of India?
Me: Another list – efficient information dissemination to illiterate poor about health, agriculture etc. through audio & video, adult literacy programmes, transparency & lesser corruption.

M1: What is MIS?
Me: said don’t know after thinking.

M2: It is management information system. Don’t you people study in B.Tech.?
Me: No sir. That paper belongs to IT branch & not CS.

M2: Name some areas which you studied in B.Tech.
Me: Some programming langs like C & C++, microprocessors, assemblers & compilers, hardware etc.

M2: Name an important temple in Kerala.
Me: Padmanabhaswamy temple in Trivandrum.

M2: Others?
Me: I started with Guruvayurappan temple, but was interrupted mid-way.

M2: No, no…which temple brings in most money?
Me: Sabarimala temple.

He was happy it seemed, because he smiled graciously.

M3: What is track-2 diplomacy?
Me: Talks between countries conducted by retired officers, NGOs, activists etc. It’s very good for betterment of bilateral ties. More people to people interaction takes place through this route.

M3: what is bus diplomacy?
Me: Cross LoC bus to improve ties..by Vajpayee Govt…

M3: So what is diplomacy?
Me: It’s the art of maintaining relations among countries at international level. (Not exactly the same words, but not the exact definition also).

M3: What do you think about India’s ‘big brother attitude’ in south Asia? what are the issues with each of the neighbouring countries?
Me: India is the largest country in south Asia, and its actions are only perceived as big brotherly by neighbours. It is not true. India’s ties with its neighbors carry historical baggage with it which is the cause of today’s problems.
Again a list – partition issue with Pakistan…

M3: (Interrupted me) but partition is way back in history.
Me: but sir, our relations are based on that event. (continued above answer)… Tamil issue with Sri Lanka…

M3: no…don’t speak about all issues…one issue at a time (in fact he had asked me for listing out all issues!). let’s talk about Pakistan. How will you solve Kashmir issue with Pakistan?
Me: We need an innovative solution…

M3: (Again interrupting me)…you need to talk more…
Me: Sir, I’m coming to the point. Realistically looking at the issue, I don’t think Pakistan will hand over its part of J&K to India. Our present borders may not be changeable. It’s better to acknowledge the same without a formal announcement as our maps cannot be changed & territorial integrity can’t be sacrificed. No internationalization of the same can be allowed. At the same time, cross border links & trade have to be improved & people-to-people contacts increased with development of J&K in mind.

M3: How should India proceed on Indo-Pak talks?
Me: Sir, instead of focusing on just Kashmir, we have talk on several issues like Siachen, sir creek, cultural ties, trade, water sharing etc.

M3: We have been doing that for long. But no results have come out.
Me: Sir, the issues are not at fault. Talks broke down because of events like 26/11, 2001 parliament attacks & cross border terror. India is not responsible for the breakdowns. So it is better to continue on multiple issues.

M4: Can I also continue on Kashmir? Are you confident? (almost laughing!)
Me: Yes sir, you can.

M4: Why not conduct plebiscite & solve the issue?
Me: Sir, there are some preconditions. Complete demilitarization must take place on both borders. Kashmiri Pandits who were chased away must be allowed to return. Only if these happen, plebiscite can be allowed.

M4: You say India & Pakistan must talk about Kashmir. But where are the Kahmiris in the scene? Has their voice been neglected?
Me: Sir, we definitely need more Kashmiri opinion. It is heard very less.

M4: Do you mean they have been ignored completely or given inadequate representation?
Me: sir, definitely they were heard. India did talk with separatists like Hurriyat conference. But more needs to be done on this front. (should’ve mentioned the pm’s interlocutors at work now, but forgot).

M4: Elections are periodically held in J&K. people vote new Govts to power. can you consider this as a sort of plebiscite?
Me: Yes sir, they reaffirm peoples faith in our system.

M4: Do you think those elections are proper, free & fair?
Me: There have been allegations in the past about rigging.

M4: No. I don’t want other’s opinions. What do you think now?
Me: Sir, thanks to a strong election commission, I can confidently say that recent elections have been free & fair, not only in J&K, but also in other states of India and I am proud of this fact.

RR: Thank you. (she smiled for the only time in the whole interview!)
Me: Thanks the board & left.

The 4 male members were smiling & very attentive, unlike Ms. RR. I too tried to keep up a smiling face through out the interview. The board was cordial on the whole. Interview lasted for about 20-25 minutes.

Abhiram G Sankar came out with a smiling face.

Also Read:10 UPSC PT Geography Questions with Explained Answers