NEET Re-exam on June 21; CBT Mode from Next Year: Pradhan

Union Education Minister Dharmendra Pradhan announced the NEET-UG re-examination on June 21 after a paper leak. The exam will shift to Computer-Based Test mode from next year. Students will have their fees refunded and pay zero fees for the upcoming exam. The NTA will allow students to choose their preferred examination city again.

Key Points: NEET Paper Leak: Re-exam June 21, CBT from Next Year

  • NEET-UG re-exam on June 21
  • CBT mode from next year
  • Zero fees for re-exam
  • Exam duration extended by 15 minutes
4 min read

"Will not let malpractice happen again": Education Minister Pradhan on NEET paper-leak, announces CBT mode exam from next year

Education Minister Dharmendra Pradhan announces NEET-UG re-exam on June 21, shift to CBT mode from next year after paper leak. Students get fee waiver.

"We will not let malpractice happen this time. - Dharmendra Pradhan"

New Delhi, May 15

Union Education Minister Dharmendra Pradhan on Friday announced that the National Testing Agency will conduct the NEET-UG re-examination on June 21 and said the exam will shift to Computer- Based Test mode from next year as part of reforms aimed at ensuring transparency.

Pradhan assured the students that they would not let malpractice happen again in the examination and said the government's topmost priority was the future of students.

"Our topmost priority is the future of the students, and the government is sensitive towards their hard work and efforts. We will not let malpractice happen this time. The government is with you. We had to make a difficult decision in the interest of the nation. We are very sad," Pradhan said.

Addressing a press conference, the Education Minister admitted that questions had gone out under the guise of "guess papers".

"Questions have gone out under the guise of guess papers," Pradhan said.

He said the verification process began on May 8 and continued over the next four days before the Centre decided to cancel the examination on May 12.

"The process began on the morning of May 8 and continued through May 8, 9, 10 and 11. When we got clarity and were confirmed that questions had gone out this time on the basis of the leaked paper, we made a decision on May 12 in the interest of the students. We did not want any deserving candidate to be deprived of their rights because of the conspiracy of education mafias," he said.

Pradhan said the government followed a zero-tolerance approach towards examination irregularities and had implemented the recommendations of the Radhakrishnan Committee after issues surfaced in the previous year.

"After the irregularities that surfaced last time, the Radhakrishnan Committee had been constituted, and we implemented its recommendations word for word for both 2025 and 2026. Despite that, this incident occurred. Hence, our first decision was to cancel the examination," he said.

The Union Minister defended the NTA and said the agency remained fully accountable.

"NTA is fully accountable... The NTA is in the hands of an able person... It has been formed with the recommendation of the Supreme Court and conducts examination of nearly 1 crore students each year... We will ensure 0 errors in the NTA," he said, while adding that the issue should be viewed as a challenge related to the examination process rather than any individual institution.

The Education Minister also announced reforms, including refunding fees paid by students and waiving charges for the upcoming examination. "We will return the fees of the students. Zero fees in the upcoming examination," Pradhan said.

He further announced that from next year, the NEET examination will be held in CBT mode as part of efforts to strengthen the examination process and prevent irregularities.

Pradhan further said the NTA will allow students to choose their preferred examination city again.

"A large number of students appear for this examination every year. The NTA will issue a detailed public notice by this evening with complete information. Prima facie, the NTA has decided to give students one week to choose their preferred examination city again, because many candidates may have left the city where they appeared for the previous exam," Pradhan said.

The Union Minister also announced that the duration of the examination would be extended by 15 minutes to facilitate formalities such as signing attendance sheets and other procedures.

"Keeping students' convenience and time constraints in mind, the NTA has decided to extend the examination duration by 15 minutes. The exam, which was scheduled from 2 pm to 5 pm, will now continue till 5:15 pm," he said.

"The Government of India will speak to the states regarding transportation, and I will also personally speak with Chief Ministers so that students face minimal difficulties," he added.

Pradhan said admit cards for the examination would be issued to all candidates by June 14.

- ANI

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Reader Comments

P
Priya S
I appreciate the government's sensitivity here, but why did it take so long to catch the leak? The Radhakrishnan Committee recommendations were implemented, yet this still happened. NTA needs better security protocols, not just empty assurances. Students' futures are at stake, and we can't afford repeated failures.
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Vikram M
Good to see the Education Minister taking personal responsibility - calling CMs for transportation support is a thoughtful touch. But the real challenge is rebuilding trust. After years of coaching centre scams and paper leaks, students deserve a system that's truly foolproof. Let's see if CBT mode really works.
R
Rohit P
Zero fees for re-exam and refund of previous fees? That's a decent gesture but honestly, the emotional toll on students who prepared for months can't be compensated. Hope the government goes after the 'education mafia' with full force - they've been ruining careers for too long.
J
James A
Interesting how India is finally moving towards digital exams for such crucial tests. CBT mode should reduce leak possibilities significantly. The extra 15 minutes is a good idea too. Hope other competitive exams follow suit - JEE, UPSC etc. Need global standard security.
K
Kavya N
As someone who wrote NEET last year, I feel for the 2025 batch. This uncertainty is heartbreaking. The government should have had better vigilance from the start. But I'm glad they cancelled rather than let the leak benefit some students at others' expense. Transparency first!

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