Thu, 4 Jun 2026 · LIVE
Updated Jun 2, 2026 · 01:05
Education News Updated Jun 2, 2026

NEET-UG Paper Leak: Education Ministry Launches Crackdown

The Union Education Ministry has launched a thorough investigation into the alleged NEET-UG paper leak, targeting the contract awarded to private firm COEMPT. Investigators are examining the company's technical eligibility and past performance. The ministry has warned of exemplary action against any officials found negligent or complicit. Steps include involving central agencies, forming a technical committee, and using IAF planes for paper transport to prevent future leaks.

NEET-UG paper leak: Education Ministry initiates action

New Delhi, June 2

In a major development amid the controversy surrounding the alleged NEET-UG entrance exam paper leak, the Union Ministry of Education has officially initiated strict administrative action.​

According to top ministry sources, the government has launched a thorough investigation into the alleged paper leaks. As a primary step in the crackdown, the Education Ministry has formally sought a detailed report regarding the controversial awarding of an operational contract to a private firm, COEMPT. ​

Sources privy to the development revealed that investigators are meticulously scrutinising the company's technical eligibility and past performance records to understand how it was entrusted with critical responsibilities related to the examination infrastructure.​

High-ranking ministry sources have categorically stated that the government is treating the alleged data breach and paper leak with the utmost seriousness. ​

The ministry has issued a stern warning that strict, exemplary action will be taken against any institutional officials or external representatives found accountable for negligence or complicity.​

While the government continues to interface with cybersecurity agencies and exam board representatives to map out the full extent of the alleged vulnerability, this internal probe signals an immediate attempt to clean up the administrative machinery.​

To fortify examination security, the government has recently handed over the primary investigation to premier central agencies. ​

Furthermore, a high-level committee of technical experts has been constituted to overhaul the digital infrastructure, mandate stricter biometric verification at centres, and implement advanced encryption protocols for paper transmission to prevent future leaks.​

The government has already taken steps, such as ensuring that exam papers are transported by Indian Air Force planes. ​

The ministry has also promised that the final findings will lead to a complete overhaul of the current examination management protocol, ensuring absolute transparency and zero tolerance for malpractice in the future.​

— IANS

Reader Comments

Sneha F

IIT me bhi hua tha, NEET me bhi hua. Education system me transparency laana zaroori hai. Government ne action liya achha kiya, par abhi dekhna hai ki COEMPT ke contract me kiske haath hain. Agar koi bada neta involved ho, to kya hoga? Puri investigation open and honest honi chahiye.

James A

This is a positive step by the Indian government. As someone who works in cybersecurity, I can tell you that securing exam infrastructure is complex. Moving paper transport to IAF planes is dramatic but necessary. Let's hope the committee's recommendations lead to real reforms, not just headlines.

Rahul R

Main NEET UG ka student hoon, is saal diya exam. Bahut stress tha, par pata chala paper leak hua to dil toot gaya. Jo log mehnat karte hain, unke saath unfair hota hai. Government ne FIR kiya hai, lekin saza sirf chote logon ko nahi, bade officials ko bhi milni chahiye. No more loot in education! 🔥

Amanda M

Good that action is being taken, but I'm skeptical. India has a history of these probes that go nowhere. The government needs to publish the committee's findings publicly, not just claim "exemplary action." Otherwise, it's just theater while students' futures are gambled with. Show us the data, the contracts, the names.

Kavya N

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

Reader Voices

Leave a comment

Be kind. Add to the conversation. 0/50
Thank you — your comment has been submitted.
JS blocked