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Education News Updated Jun 1, 2026

United Doctors Front Proposes New Exam Body for NEET Reform

The United Doctors Front presented reform suggestions to a parliamentary panel, calling for the dissolution of the National Testing Agency. They recommend creating a new statutory examination body through an Act of Parliament for greater accountability. The group also urged investigations into the NEET-UG 2026 paper leak alongside unresolved issues from 2024. They emphasized that NEET must remain transparent to restore public trust in India's medical education system.

United doctors front presents NEET, NTA reform suggestions before parliamentary panel; calls for new examination body

New Delhi, June 1

The United Doctors Front on Monday presented its views and suggestions before the Chairman, Department-related Parliamentary Standing Committee on Education, Women, Children, Youth and Sports regarding the use of pen-and-paper testing versus Computer-Based Test, and issues concerning NEET and the National Testing Agency.

Dr Lakshya Mittal, Chairperson, United Doctors Front, had a constructive one-to-one interaction with the Chairman of the Parliamentary Committee. The Chairman gave a patient hearing to the concerns, suggestions, and recommendations submitted by UDF in its detailed representation.

In its submission, UDF stated that the concerns surrounding NEET are not limited only to the mode of examination, but also relate to the larger issue of transparency, statutory accountability, confidentiality, and credibility of the examination-conducting body.

UDF recommended that the present structure of the NTA should be dissolved/replaced, and a new national examination body should be constituted through an Act of Parliament.

UDF submitted that a statutory body, answerable to Parliament and subject to stronger public accountability, is essential for conducting high-stakes national examinations such as NEET.

UDF also requested a strict inquiry into the possible misuse of the National Emblem by NTA, considering its registration as a society and the provisions of the State Emblem of India (Prohibition of Improper Use) Act, 2005. UDF urged that the competent authorities should examine whether the use of the emblem and official representation by NTA is legally authorised and compliant with applicable law.

Further, UDF submitted that the concerns relating to NEET-UG 2026 should not be treated in isolation. UDF recommended that the NEET-UG 2026 paper leak concerns should be investigated along with unresolved issues from NEET-UG 2024, including the special registration window, centre allotment patterns, grace marks issue, role of agencies and centres, and allegations of non-cooperation in earlier investigations.

UDF emphasised that repeated controversies surrounding NEET have severely affected the confidence of lakhs of medical aspirants and their families. The organisation urged a comprehensive, time-bound, and transparent investigation into all institutional lapses, officials, agencies, vendors, centres, and persons responsible.

Dr Babita Sikriwal & Dr Rakesh Beniwal said that NEET is not merely an examination, but the gateway to India's medical education system. Therefore, the process must be transparent, fair, secure, and accountable. UDF expressed hope that the Parliamentary Committee will consider the suggestions in the larger interest of students, medical education, and public trust.

— ANI

Reader Comments

Priya S

As a doctor myself, I completely support UDF's demand. The NTA has become a mess - repeated scams, grace marks controversy, and now questions about misuse of the National Emblem. How can we expect our future doctors to have faith in such a flawed system? 🙏

Michael C

Interesting to see this from an Indian perspective. In the US, the MCAT is run by the AAMC which is a private non-profit, but they have strict oversight. Maybe India needs to look at international best practices too. Transparency is key when so many lives are at stake.

Ananya R

My younger sister is preparing for NEET 2027 and she's so stressed. Every year there's some controversy - paper leaks, grace marks, centre allotment issues. The UDF is absolutely right that we need a completely new examination body. Students deserve a fair chance! 😡

Emma D

I'm an NRI and I've been following this closely. The NEET exam is crucial for Indian students abroad too. A statutory body answerable to Parliament would definitely improve credibility. Good to see the Parliamentary Committee taking this seriously.

Vikram M

While I appreciate the concerns, let's not forget that even with its flaws, NEET has reduced corruption in medical admissions compared to the earlier system. But yes, UDF has raised valid points - the NTA needs complete overhaul, not just cosmetic changes. Let's hope the Parliamentary Committee acts on this. 🙂

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

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