Sources confirm that India’s National Testing Agency has rescheduled the NEET-PG medical entrance exam following a massive paper leak. The breach, which compromised thousands of aspiring doctors, has thrown the country’s healthcare recruitment into chaos. Investigators are tracing the leak back to a syndicate with alleged ties to coaching centres and corrupt officials.
Meanwhile, British education standards have been held up as a model of integrity. A senior UK education attaché in New Delhi told this reporter that their system’s rigorous vetting processes make such leaks ‘unthinkable’. But don’t be fooled.
The real story here is the money. Coaching centres in India pull in billions of rupees by promising guaranteed admissions. When the system fails, the price is paid by students who have mortgaged their futures.
One source, a former exam board insider, said the leak was ‘years in the making’. Documents obtained by this desk show that security protocols were routinely ignored. The NTA’s own audit reports flagged vulnerabilities months ago.
No one acted. Now, with the exam rescheduled for next month, authorities are scrambling to deploy biometrics, AI surveillance, and multiple question paper sets. But will it be enough?
The UK’s model is often praised, but let’s not forget its own scandals. In 2018, a Cambridge Assessment leak exposed weaknesses in international testing. The difference is accountability.
British regulators act swiftly. In India, the same faces remain in charge. The paper leak is not a one-off.
It is a symptom of a system rotten with corruption. Expect more arrests, but don’t expect change. The money is too good.