NEET TRACK RECORD IS NOT NEAT

On May 3, 2026, over 22 lakh young students sat for the NEET-UG examination — the sole

gateway to undergraduate medical education in the country. Nine days later, their futures

were thrown into uncertainty. The National Testing Agency (NTA), acting on directions from

the Government of India, cancelled the exam after central investigative agencies confirmed

that the question paper had been leaked, circulated, and sold before the examination even

began. The CBI has registered an FIR, arrested seven people, detained over 45, and is

actively probing whether an NTA insider was also involved. A re-examination has been

scheduled for June 21, 2026. HOW THE LEAK HAPPENED According to the CBI’s own

remand plea, the paper was sourced from a printing press in Jaipur. An accused named

Mangilal Biwal allegedly received a hard copy of the NEET-UG paper, handwrote its

contents, scanned it into PDF files, and circulated them through WhatsApp and Telegram to

students at coaching centers in Sikar, Rajasthan. By April 29—four days before the

exam—the leaked papers had already reached a counselor’s mobile phone. Students paid

between ₹2 lakh and ₹5 lakh per person for access; some aspirants reportedly paid as much

as ₹30 lakh. The Delhi court, upon granting CBI custody of the five key accused, noted the

evidence revealed an “organized gang” leaking confidential papers for monetary gain. The

JVE arrests include Mangilal Biwal, Vikas Biwal, and Dinesh Biwal (all from Jaipur); Yash

Yadav (Gurugram); and Shubham Khairnar (Nashik). Investigators say the network spanned

at least eight states, including Rajasthan, Maharashtra, Haryana, Bihar, Kerala, Uttarakhand,

and Jammu & Kashmir. A FAILURE THAT WAS PROMISED WOULD NOT RECUR. What

makes the 2026 scandal legally and morally indefensible is its familiarity. In 2024, NEET-UG

was engulfed in one of India’s worst examination scandals—67 students scored a perfect

720/720, grace marks were fraudulently awarded to 1,563 candidates, and the CBI was

called in.

The NTA’s Director General was removed. Parliament debated the collapse. A high-level

committee chaired by former ISRO Chairman Dr. K. Radhakrishnan submitted 101 reform

recommendations—including a shift to digital, centre-generated papers — but the

government made these public only in April 2025, six months after submission. None of the

critical reforms were implemented before May 3, 2026. The Public Examinations (Prevention

of Unfair Means) Act, 2024 — passed specifically after the 2024 scandal — prescribes 3 to

10 years’ imprisonment and fines up to ₹1 crore for organised exam crime. A law was on the

books. The crime happened anyway. THE HUMAN COST In Lakhimpur Kheri, Uttar

Pradesh, a 21-year-old NEET aspirant hanged himself at his home after the cancellation was

announced, according to his father. Across the country, students and parents who had spent

years and enormous sums in preparation found themselves in limbo. The Federation of All

India Medical Association (FAIMA) led a petition before the Supreme Court demanding that

NTA be replaced or fundamentally restructured with a robust, autonomous body. The

Federation of Resident Doctors’ Association (FORDA) wrote to the Prime Minister

demanding strict action and an immediate shift to computer-based testing. Protests erupted

outside Shastri Bhawan in New Delhi. Additionally, investigators are now questioning

whether NEET 2025 was also compromised — the Biwal family, at the centre of the 2026

probe, had four members who cleared NEET in 2025, a result once celebrated nationally,

and now under scrutiny. No formal investigation into 2025 has yet been ordered, but the

absence of a probe is not a clean bill of health. LEGAL ACCOUNTABILITY & WHAT MUST

HAPPEN The Supreme Court must take suo motu cognizance of the NEET 2026 scandal

and impose a time-bound, court-monitored CBI investigation. FAIMA’s petition for NTA

restructuring must receive an urgent hearing. If CBI confirms insider involvement within NTA,criminal prosecution under the Public Examinations Act must follow — not merely

administrative transfers. A parallel judicial probe into NEET 2025 is necessary to protect the

integrity of medical seats already filled. The government’s announced shift to

computer-based testing from 2027 must be codified as a legal obligation, not left as policy

intent. Students affected by the cancellation deserve a formal redress mechanism beyond a

rescheduled exam date. Under Article 14 and Article 21 of the Constitution, the state’s

repeated failure to ensure a fair examination process is not just an administrative lapse—it is

a violation of the fundamental rights of 22 lakh students who were promised equal

opportunity and received betrayal instead.

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