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Maharashtra News Updated Jun 5, 2026

Maha CM Fadnavis Orders Strict Vigil for NEET Exam Security

Maharashtra Chief Minister Devendra Fadnavis has ordered strict vigilance and security measures for the upcoming NEET examination. He directed that all CCTV systems at exam centres must be fully operational and continuously monitored. The CM specifically highlighted the need for heightened security in Pune and Latur, which are major educational hubs. The directives come in the wake of the 2026 NEET-UG paper leak controversy and include provisions for cybersecurity, traffic management, and monsoon preparedness.

Maha CM orders strict vigil for NEET exam

Mumbai, June 5

Chief Minister Devendra Fadnavis on Friday directed the administration and all concerned state authorities to remain highly vigilant and implement necessary measures at examination centres to ensure a transparent, smooth, and stress-free environment for students appearing for the National Eligibility cum Entrance Test.

He emphasised the need to take strict precautions to prevent any form of malpractice.

The directives were issued during a high-level review meeting chaired by the Chief Minister to oversee the preparatory arrangements for the upcoming NEET examination.

CM Fadnavis highlighted several crucial operational and security protocols. He said all CCTV systems across examination centres must remain fully operational and continuously monitored. Preventive measures must be deployed to ensure robust cybersecurity.

The inspection and identity verification process for candidates must be executed with utmost stringency.

He added that social media must be leveraged effectively to spread accurate information among students, parents, and citizens. In the event of any rumours or misleading information regarding the exam process, immediate clarifications must be issued to prevent confusion or anxiety.

The Chief Minister further stated that the administration must place a special focus on examination centres in Pune and Latur. In addition to preventing malpractices, the district administration, police department, education department, and other related agencies must coordinate to ensure seamless security, effective traffic management, uninterrupted power supply, drinking water, medical facilities, and monsoon preparedness.

During the session, Abhishek Singh, Director General of the National Testing Agency (NTA), gave a comprehensive presentation detailing the number of NEET examination centres in Maharashtra, available facilities, security arrangements, and the micro-planning executed for the seamless conduct of the examination.

CM's directives come against the backdrop of the recent fiasco centred on the widespread 2026 paper leak and subsequent cancellation of the NEET-UG exam.

The Chief Minister's specific mention of Pune and Latur stems from their status as major educational hubs in Maharashtra. Pune is historically known as the "Oxford of the East," hosting a massive student population and numerous exam centres.

Latur is famous for the "Latur Pattern," a highly intensive coaching methodology that attracts medical aspirants from all over the state. Because of the high concentration of coaching centres and the high-stakes competition in these two cities, authorities exercise heightened vigilance here to prevent paper leaks, dummy candidates, and digital malpractice.

Since the meeting referenced "monsoon preparedness," it highlights the logistical challenges peculiar to Maharashtra's geography. Sudden heavy downpours can disrupt public transport, cause power outages, or flood low-lying areas.

The CM's directive ensures that local municipalities and disaster management cells are on standby so that students face zero hurdles in reaching their centres on time, said government sources.

— IANS

Reader Comments

Priya S

As a medical aspirant's mother, this is reassuring. The mention of monsoon preparedness gives me hope - last year my niece's exam was delayed by 3 hours in Mumbai rains! Please ensure the helpline numbers are widely shared on WhatsApp groups. Students need mental support too, not just CCTV. 🙏

Siddhartha F

Good steps, but I'm skeptical. We've heard this before. The real issue is the NTA's ability to implement micro-planning in remote talukas. In my village near Ratnagiri, the nearest centre is 50km away and they didn't even have a functional CCTV last time. Ground reality matters more than press releases.

Rahul R

Big fan of the Latur Pattern mention! But honestly, instead of just CCTV, why not use AI-based monitoring? And please ban all coaching centres from operating near exam halls on exam day - that's where the dummy candidate menace starts. Still, kudos to CM for taking this seriously. One step at a time. 🇮🇳

Kavita C

Stress-free environment? My son is preparing for NEET and the psychological pressure is unreal. The CM should also mandate counsellors at every centre. And please, no unfair invigilators who harass girls for using the washroom. Focus on dignity too, not just security cameras.

Ashwin V

I appreciate the social media angle - fake news about paper leaks spreads like wildfire in our coaching circles. Last year, a WhatsApp forward caused panic in my hostel at 2am! But more importantly, ensure the NTA's own website doesn't crash on results day.

We welcome thoughtful discussions from our readers. Please keep comments respectful and on-topic.

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