Protests have erupted across India. In cities from Delhi to Patna, students are taking to the streets. Their demand: a re-examination of the National Eligibility cum Entrance Test (NEET). This year's exam, held on May 5, was marred by allegations of paper leaks, widespread cheating, and administrative failures. The crisis has left millions of young lives in limbo.
The NEET is the gateway to medical education in India. Over 2.4 million students sat for it this year. For many from rural and low-income backgrounds, it is their only shot at becoming a doctor. But the integrity of that shot is now in question.
Reports of the question paper being leaked on social media hours before the exam surfaced early. Students claim they saw screenshots and answer keys circulating on platforms like Telegram and WhatsApp. “We studied for years, but someone shared answers online,” says Priya Sharma, a candidate from Bihar. “How is that fair?”
The National Testing Agency (NTA), which conducts the exam, has denied a systemic leak. It called the allegations “baseless” and attributed them to “miscreants”. But evidence tells a different story. In some centres in Rajasthan and Haryana, students reportedly accessed papers via mobile phones. In others, answer keys were exchanged openly.
The crisis deepened when the NTA announced a “grace marks” policy for over 1,500 students. The reasoning: loss of time due to faulty clocks or technical glitches. But grace marks pushed many borderline candidates over the cut-off. Merit rankings changed overnight. Students who missed out on top colleges by narrow margins now suspect foul play. “They gave 20 grace marks to some. That’s not a fix, it’s a distortion,” says Dr. Anjali Mehta, a medical educator in Mumbai.
The NTA’s credibility has taken a severe hit. The agency was formed in 2017 to bring transparency to high-stakes exams. But this year’s NEET is the third major exam scandal under its watch. The Common University Entrance Test (CUET) faced glitches in 2022. The Joint Entrance Examination (JEE) had irregularities in 2023. Now NEET, the most competitive of all, is under fire.
The government’s response has been defensive. Education Minister Dharmendra Pradhan told Parliament that the exam was fair. He dismissed calls for a re-exam as “anti-student”. But critics say the ministry is protecting the NTA at the cost of student futures.
Legal challenges have piled up. The Supreme Court is hearing multiple petitions demanding a fresh test. On June 12, the court asked the NTA to explain the grace marks. A verdict is expected soon. But even a court order may not rebuild trust.
What is at stake beyond this year’s results? The NEET crisis exposes a deeper malaise: an education system that overemphasizes a single exam. In India, success in a test can determine a student’s entire career. That pressure creates perverse incentives to cheat or manipulate.
For students like Priya Sharma, the wait is excruciating. She scored high enough to get a seat, but now she doubts if her rank is real. “I want a re-exam, even if I lose marks. I just want fairness,” she says.
Millions of other students feel the same. They are demanding a new exam, not because they want an easier path, but because they want a level playing field. Whether the Indian state can deliver that remains an open question.








