NEET 2026 Paper leak

Indian academic and political scandal From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

The 2026 NEET-UG paper leak controversy is an academic and political scandal involving the National Eligibility cum Entrance Test (Undergraduate) for prospective medical and dental students held in India on 3 May 2026. Following allegations of a "paper leak", the National Testing Agency officially cancelled the examination on 12 May 2026 .[1] At least 3 students have committed suicide following paper leak.[2]

Background and incident

The National Eligibility cum Entrance Test (Undergraduate) (NEET-UG) is the sole entrance gateway for medical and dental undergraduate courses in India. On 3 May 2026, the exam was conducted across thousands of centres under "full security protocols."

Reports of malpractice emerged after repeated complaints to the NTA and CBI by Shashikant Suthar, a chemistry teacher. in Sikar Shashikant noticed a PDF being forwarded on phones in the guise of a "guess paper", but after analyzing it he realized the questions, sequence of options, etc matched the official question paper. Over the next few days he continued gathering evidence and similar leaked papers and sent detailed emails to the NTA.[3] Investigations revealed that a document containing approximately 410 questions had been circulating on WhatsApp groups between 15 days to a month prior to the exam. Specifically, officials noted that nearly 120 questions from the Chemistry section allegedly matched the actual paper exactly.[4]

Investigation

The scale of the leak triggered a multi-state investigation. In Rajasthan, the Special Operations Group initiated the investigation, identifying "striking similarities" between the leaked material and the actual test. A suspected "mastermind" was reportedly arrested in Jaipur as the probe deepened.[5] Connections later emerged in Latur and Nashik in Maharashtra, where the authorities detained 45 individuals linked to the paper trail. Due to the nationwide implications, the government of India referred the matter to the Central Bureau of Investigation for a comprehensive inquiry.[6][7]

Consequences and re-examination

On 12 May 2026, the National Testing Agency (NTA) announced that the exam was officially cancelled, and that a re-examination would be held.[8] In a statement posted on X, the NTA announced that the decision to cancel was taken "in the interest of students" and to protect the credibility of the national examination system.[9] It confirmed that the exam would be rescheduled on dates to be announced separately.[9] The NTA also clarified that the fees already paid by candidates would be returned and that no fresh registration or additional fees would be required; existing candidate data and examination centres would be used for the rescheduled exam.[10] On 15 May, the NTA announced that the re-examination would take place on 21 June 2026.[11]

Political and social response

The cancellation sparked nationwide protests by student groups, including by the National Students' Union of India at Shastri Bhavan in Delhi.[12]

At least 3 students have committed suicide following paper leak.[2]

The Leader of the Opposition, Rahul Gandhi, criticized the government's handling of the exam, describing the leak as a "crime" against the youth's future and comparing the examination process to an auction.[13]

Aftermath

The Minister of Education in the Union Council of Ministers, Dharmendra Pradhan, chaired a high-level meeting to discuss modalities for conducting the re-examination.[14] The NTA stated that enhanced security arrangements, including tighter monitoring at examination centres and stricter handling of confidential materials, would be implemented.[15] In a press conference, Pradhan admitted that "there was a breach somewhere in the chain of command despite implementing the Radhakrishnan committee’s recommendations." He also announced that, starting in 2027, the NEET-UG exam would be conducted as a computer-based test, similar to the Joint Entrance Examination (Main) and the Common University Entrance Test, both of which are also administered by the NTA.[16]

See also

References

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