The scandal surrounding India’s National Eligibility cum Entrance Test (NEET) for medical admissions has spiralled into unprecedented chaos, with tens of thousands of students forced to retake the exam following a massive paper leak that sources describe as “systemic”. The retest, ordered by the Supreme Court in an emergency session, has thrown the admissions cycle into disarray and raised urgent questions about the integrity of the country’s high-stakes examination system.
Documents obtained by this newsroom reveal that leaked question papers were circulating on encrypted messaging apps hours before the original exam date in May. The leak, which originated from a printing press in Haryana, has now been traced to a network of coaching centres and middlemen who allegedly sold the papers for sums ranging from 500,000 to 2 million rupees per set. Three arrests have been made but sources confirm the full extent of the racket remains under investigation.
The Supreme Court’s intervention came after the Central Bureau of Investigation filed a report detailing how at least 1,200 students had accessed the leaked material. But in a stunning escalation, the court ordered a complete retest for all 1.8 million candidates who sat the original exam, citing the impossibility of isolating the beneficiaries of the leak. The decision has sparked fury among students who claim they are being penalised for a crime they did not commit. Protests erupted in Delhi and Patna, with demonstrators blocking highways and clashing with police.
“We have studied for years and now we are being asked to prove ourselves again because of the failures of the system,” said Ravi Sharma, a 19-year-old from Uttar Pradesh who travelled to Delhi for the retest. “This is not justice. This is chaos.” The retest, scheduled for September, will see students sit a new paper that the National Testing Agency insists is “leak-proof” despite the obvious irony.
The financial cost is staggering. The original exam cost the government an estimated 40 crore rupees to administer. The retest will add another 25 crore rupees, funds that could have been used to improve infrastructure in rural medical colleges. Meanwhile, the delay means thousands of students may miss the academic year entirely, forcing them to wait another 12 months for admission.
But the deeper story here is not just about a leak. It is about a system that has become a multi-crore industry for middlemen and corrupt officials. The NEET exam is the gateway to India’s prestigious government medical colleges, where seats are limited and competition is fierce. For years, there have been whispers of paper leaks and irregularities, but this is the first time the machinery has been exposed on such a scale. A senior investigator, speaking on condition of anonymity, told me: “This is just the tip of the iceberg. There are people in high places who have been selling access for decades. The paper leak was just a symptom of a disease that has infected the entire admissions process.”
The disease is unaccountable power. The National Testing Agency, which conducts the exam, operates with little external oversight. Its officials are political appointees who answer to no one. And the coaching centres, many of which are run by politicians and their relatives, have been allowed to operate as private fiefdoms. The result is a system where the rich can buy their children’s futures while the poor are left to compete on a rigged field.
The Supreme Court’s decision to order a retest is a rare act of accountability, but it will not fix the underlying rot. Until the government creates an independent body to oversee the examination process, with real powers of investigation and enforcement, the leaks will continue. And the students, the millions who dream of becoming doctors, will remain pawns in a game they never agreed to play.
As I write this, the streets of India’s cities are filled with students demanding justice. They have every right to be angry. But the real question is whether the country’s leaders have the courage to tear down the system and build a new one that serves the public interest, not the private greed of a few.