Short story contest marred by ‘AI allegations’
THE Commonwealth Foundation has announced it is conducting a review of its short story prize selection process, with the update coming after social media users accused a regional winner of using AI in their submission, The Hindu reported.
Social media users first spotted something unusual in the story, authored by the regional winner for the Caribbean region, Jamir Nazir, saying that it displayed signs of text generated by AI large language models (LLMs).
Others ran sections of the published short story through AI detectors in order to make the claim that it was machine-generated. Some users even claimed that the photo used to identify the author showed signs of being AI-generated or morphed.
The author has yet to respond to the allegations. The Commonwealth Short Story Prize is a prestigious international writing competition open to adult citizens of the commonwealth countries, including India.
While five authors have been shortlisted from their respective regions this year, an overall winner is set to be announced during an online award ceremony on June 30, 2026.
Regional winners receive £2,500, while the overall winner receives a total of £5,000 as a prize. The foundation noted it was reviewing its selection process. “The Commonwealth Foundation would like to assure our community that we take seriously the integrity of the judging process of the Short Story Prize.
All entrants are asked to submit their original work in accordance with our entry rules. We are conducting a thorough, transparent review of the selection process,” stated a notice on the official website on May 19.
The notice did not mention any of the authors by name or allude to any AI allegations in specific.
According to the official website, Mr. Nazir is a Trinidadian writer of East Indian heritage. His story is titled The Serpent in the Grove. “Set in rural Trinidad, this is a story of a struggling farmer, a silenced young wife, and a grove that seems to remember what human beings try to bury. Steeped in desire, poverty and dread, it explores betrayal, survival and the stubborn force of a woman’s will,” stated the official introduction to the story.
Published in Dawn, May 20th, 2026