India’s National Testing Agency has implemented unprecedented security measures for the re-sit of the National Eligibility-cum-Entrance Test for medical students, after a massive paper leak prompted the review of 1,200 high-scoring candidates. Sources confirm the leak, which involved the circulation of the exam paper on WhatsApp hours before the test, has led to the cancellation of results for 60,000 students and a re-examination scheduled for April 30. The agency has deployed biometric verification, jammers, and CCTV monitoring at all centres, with invigilators drawn from outside the local districts to prevent collusion.
British universities, which rely on NEET scores to admit Indian students to medical programmes, are monitoring the situation closely. A spokesperson for the British Council told this reporter: “We are in touch with Indian authorities to ensure the integrity of the process. Any degree of corruption in the screening process undermines trust in the credentials of incoming students.
” Documents obtained by this journalist show that Indian medical schools had already flagged concerns about the rigour of NEET after a 2022 leak saw 40 students arrested. The question now is whether the re-sit can restore confidence or whether it is merely a bandage on a systemic haemorrhage. For British admissions offices, the stakes are high: Indian students contribute over £2 billion annually to the UK economy, and any perception of compromised exam integrity could deter both applicants and universities.