Explained: How India’s biggest medical entrance exam descended into crisis

Postofday
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For millions of Indian families, becoming a doctor is more than a career ambition. It is often seen as a pathway to social mobility, financial security and prestige, with years of preparation and, in many cases, substantial financial investment resting on a single examination.

This year, however, that examination became the centre of one of India’s biggest education controversies in recent memory.

More than two million candidates sat the nationwide re-examination for the National Eligibility cum Entrance Test (NEET-UG) after authorities cancelled the results of the original May 3 exam over allegations that question papers had been leaked.

The retest, conducted on June 21 at 5,440 centres across India and 14 overseas centres, has allowed India’s medical admissions cycle to move forward while placing renewed scrutiny on the National Testing Agency (NTA), which administers some of the country’s largest entrance examinations.

What is NEET, and why does it matter?

For international readers unfamiliar with India’s admissions system, NEET is the single gateway to undergraduate medical education. Conducted in 13 languages, it determines admissions to MBBS, dental, AYUSH (traditional Indian systems of medicine) and several allied health programs at public and private institutions across the country, making it one of the world’s largest university entrance examinations.

Unlike many higher education systems, where universities have their own admissions processes, aspiring doctors in India largely depend on a single national examination. For many students, years of preparation come down to one test, making any disruption especially significant.

More than 2.2 million students registered for NEET this year, competing for approximately 129,600 MBBS seats across 824 medical colleges, alongside places in dentistry, AYUSH and allied health courses. Government medical colleges, where tuition fees are heavily subsidised, remain the most sought after, while private institutions are often several times more expensive.

Alongside the shortage of medical seats, a vast coaching industry has emerged around NEET, with many students beginning preparation years before sitting the examination. Families routinely spend significant sums on coaching classes, accommodation and study materials, increasing both the financial and emotional stakes attached to the test.

The shortage of affordable medical seats has also made India one of the world’s largest source markets for medical education abroad.

Every year, thousands of students enrol in medical schools in countries including Russia, Georgia, Kazakhstan, Uzbekistan, Kyrgyzstan, Iran and the Philippines, attracted by lower tuition fees and comparatively easier access to medical degrees.

Graduates who return to practise in India must pass the Foreign Medical Graduate Examination (FMGE), where persistently low pass rates have raised questions about the quality of training at some overseas medical schools, an issue previously examined by The PIE News.

The trust students had in the system has been shattered. There is a massive trust deficit among the youth of the country
Satej Patil, Indian National Congress

From paper leak to nationwide retest

The original NEET examination was held on May 3, but allegations that question papers had been leaked quickly escalated into a national controversy. The government subsequently cancelled the examination, handed the case to the Central Bureau of Investigation (CBI) and announced that candidates would sit the exam again.

The episode also revived memories of the 2024 NEET controversy, when allegations of paper leaks, fraud and irregularities over grace marks triggered widespread protests and legal challenges, raising fresh questions about the integrity of the examination.

Political pressure mounted rapidly, with the opposition Congress party demanding the resignation of union education minister Dharmendra Pradhan before announcing a nationwide campaign from June 30 calling for broader reforms to India’s examination system.

Launching the campaign, Congress leader Satej Patil said: “The trust students had in the system has been shattered. There is a massive trust deficit among the youth of the country.”

The controversy also gave rise to the Cockroach Janta Party, a youth-led protest movement that has called for greater accountability and Pradhan’s resignation.

Acknowledging shortcomings in the original examination process, Union education minister Dharmendra Pradhan said: “I accept we made mistakes.”

In a separate interview, he added: “NTA had placed its trust in certain teachers, but some of them did not fulfil their responsibility. Rakshak hi bhakshak ban gaye (the protectors themselves turned predators).”

A security operation on an unprecedented scale

Authorities subsequently introduced some of the most extensive security measures ever deployed for the re-examination. Candidates underwent Aadhaar-based biometric verification, facial authentication and two-stage frisking before entering examination halls, while CCTV surveillance, signal jammers and command centres monitored the process nationwide. The Indian Air Force also transported question papers to some regions under enhanced security arrangements.

Ahead of the examination, the government temporarily restricted Telegram after the NTA raised concerns that the messaging platform could be used by organised cheating networks to circulate misinformation or facilitate malpractice.

The enhanced security reflected the government’s determination to restore confidence after the cancellation of the original examination triggered weeks of uncertainty for students and their families.

Dismissing videos circulating online that claimed another paper leak, the NTA said: “The video is fake and the claims it makes are false.” It urged students and parents to rely only on official communication, adding that “our 20 lakh-plus aspirants deserve a calm and fair process”.

Officials said enhanced verification procedures also prevented several attempts at impersonation and document fraud during the re-examination.

While authorities described the exercise as having been conducted smoothly, many candidates said the paper, particularly the physics section, was more demanding than the cancelled May examination.

Others spoke of the emotional strain of preparing for a second sitting after weeks of uncertainty, alongside the additional costs of coaching, travel and accommodation. Reports of suicides involving NEET aspirants during the controversy also renewed debate over the pressures associated with the highly competitive entrance examination system in the country.

What happens next?

Results from the re-examination are expected soon, paving the way for the counselling process that allocates students to medical colleges across India, while the CBI investigation into the alleged paper leak remains ongoing.

Prime Minister Narendra Modi later praised the conduct of the re-examination, describing it as an example of a “whole-of-government” approach and commending the coordination between ministries involved in delivering the exercise.

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