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India News Updated Jun 20, 2026

NTA Deploys 1.38 Lakh CCTV Cameras, 51,000 Jammers for NEET UG 2025 Re-exam

The National Testing Agency has installed over 1.38 lakh CCTV cameras and deployed 51,311 jammers for the NEET UG 2025 re-exam scheduled on June 21. The exam is being held across 5,440 centres in 551 Indian cities and 14 abroad, with 95,000 rooms equipped with CCTV. Extensive security measures include 38,795 frisking staff, 48,448 biometric verification personnel, and AI-based monitoring. A nationwide mock drill was conducted on June 20, and NTA is closely monitoring social media for fraudulent claims.

NTA installs over 1.38 lakh CCTV cameras, jammers for NEET UG 2026 re-exam

New Delhi, June 20

The National Testing Agency on Saturday has put in place comprehensive arrangements to ensure a fair, secure and candidate-friendly examination.

The examination, scheduled for June 21, is being conducted across 5,440 centres in 551 cities in India and 14 centres abroad. The examination is being conducted in English and 12 Indian languages.

The examination will be held in more than 95,000 examination rooms, each equipped with CCTV. A total of 1,38,560 CCTV cameras have been installed, with feeds monitored virtually at the National, State and Ministry levels. To secure the examination against electronic malpractice, 51,311 jammers have been deployed (17,054 by ECIL and 34,257 by BEL), said a release.

Extensive personnel have been mobilised for examination-day duties. Each of the more than 95,000 examination rooms will have two invigilators, and every centre is staffed with more than ten additional examination functionaries. Candidate verification has been strengthened with 38,795 frisking staff and 48,448 personnel for biometric verification -- with biometric manpower doubled and supported by face authentication -- so that verification is thorough while queues at centres are kept to a minimum. A Centre Systems Officer (CSO) has been deployed at each of the 5,440 centres to monitor the CCTV feed and resolve any technical issues on the spot.

NTA has also deployed around 6,700 Observers at examination centres, supported by more than 100 virtual observers monitoring the live CCTV footage centrally. The CCTV footage is additionally analysed using AI-based tools to flag anomalies, providing a multi-layered monitoring system at the National, State and Ministry levels, the release further said.

There has been extensive mobilisation of the State and district administrations, with deployment of police, paramilitary forces, the Indian Air Force and the Department of Posts. On average, around 40 to 50 security personnel have been deployed at each examination centre. Bank officials have been deployed at approximately 1,500 bank branches holding the confidential material, and the Department of Posts will coordinate its teams for the collection of OMR sheets at around 700 collection centres across the country. Review meetings have been held with the Chief Secretaries and senior officials of all States, and districts have confirmed centre arrangements.

A nationwide mock drill was conducted on June 20 to verify all systems -- jammers, CCTV, frisking staff and biometrics. Coordinators have verified the examination material held in the custodian banks and confirmed its availability for the examination.

In coordination with state governments, student-friendly facilities are being provided at centres, including drinking water, ORS, ambulances, and shaded waiting areas for parents. For candidates, additional measures include a wall clock in every examination room, additional rough-work pages (with pages provided at the beginning of the booklet for the convenience of left-handed candidates), and an extended examination window to offset the time taken for entry formalities, the release further said.

NTA is closely monitoring social media and is taking firm action against rumour-mongering and fraudulent "paper leak" claims, which cause needless stress to candidates. Candidates and parents are advised to rely solely on official communication from NTA and to disregard unverified messages.

NTA appeals to all stakeholders to extend full support to the candidates and to help reduce examination-day stress, so that over 22 lakh aspirants can appear for the examination in a calm, secure and supportive environment.

— ANI

Reader Comments

Aditya G

This is good but I have a concern. With so many jammers (51,311!), won't there be interference with regular mobile networks near exam centres? Many parents waiting outside might face issues. Also, what about students who use mobile phones for genuine medical alerts? Hope NTA has thought about this.

Rohit P

As a parent of a NEET aspirant, I'm relieved but also worried. 95,000 rooms with two invigilators each - that's 1.9 lakh invigilators! Plus all the security personnel. Are we really spending this much just to catch a few cheaters? Could some of this money be spent on improving rural healthcare instead? 🤔

Siddharth J

AI-based analysis of CCTV footage? That's impressive! And 100 virtual observers monitoring live - feels like we're preparing for a heist movie 😄. But seriously, I appreciate the effort. The mock drill on June 20 is a good move too. Hope this sets a new standard for all entrance exams in India.

Kavya N

I appreciate the security but why should 22 lakh honest students suffer because of a few cheaters? All these checks create long queues and anxiety. The extended entry window is good, but still. Also, monitoring social media for 'rumour-mongering' sounds like censorship. We need fairness but not at the cost of freedom.

Varun X

Great to see the Indian Air Force and Department of Posts involved too! After the NEET paper leak scandal, this level of coordination is needed. But I hope they also focus on the actual quality of medical education instead of just exam security.

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

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