Jaipur, July 8 -- A week after the Rajasthan government informed that it is not considering to cancel the Sub-Inspector 2021 examination, the high court on Monday asked the reason for a "somersault" of the same cabinet committee that had earlier suggested cancelling the paper. "It is the same cabinet sub-committee who took suggestions from the Special Operation Group (SOG) and the state Advocate General (AG) in August last year and was considering to cancel the exam. They had also approached the chief minister's office that time for the same. I need to understand why they suddenly took a somersault in the final decision?" said a single-judge bench of justice Sameer Jain. Responding to the court, the additional advocate general of the government, Rajendra Prasad, told the court, "In August, only four months after the investigation, the committee was not in a position to segregate the tainted and untainted candidates. But, later further probe revealed that the scam was not so widespread that it can't be traced. Therefore, the decision was changed." He added: "The nature of the petition is also flawed as the petitioners filed it before the interview and demanded cancellation of the final exam, not the written one. Many of them later succeeded (in the exam) but didn't disclose it to the court so far. It seems the petitioner filed the petition for their personal benefit, which should be rejected immediately." On July 1, AAG Prasad told the court, "The cabinet sub-committee which was formed to take a decision on the cancellation of the SI-2021 exam had sent its report to the home department and the chief minister's office. The CM approved the report in which the committed stated that the cancelling this exam is not under their consideration at this moment." In the report, the government stated that cancelling the entire recruitment process of the SI-2021 at this stage of the investigation will be a "premature decision" as only a negligible proportion of the total candidates have been found cheating in the exam. "The conclusive analyses of the report would reflect that within different categories of candidates, aggregately 53 tainted candidates out of the total appointed 838 candidates which is 6.3%, have been terminated or suspended from the service," the report read....