NTA ‘structurally incapacitated’, NEET-UG shift to computer mode won’t fix integrity, says doctors’ body
The Federation of All India Medical Association (FAIMA) filed a petition in the Supreme Court on May 13, 2026, arguing that the National Testing Agency is "s...
What Happened
- The Federation of All India Medical Association (FAIMA) filed a petition in the Supreme Court on May 13, 2026, arguing that the National Testing Agency is "structurally incapacitated" to conduct a credible re-examination of NEET-UG 2026.
- The petition documents how the NTA ignored the Radhakrishnan Committee's 2024 recommendations for a fundamental overhaul of examination security architecture — specifically digital transmission, biometric verification, and end-to-end cryptographic safeguards.
- FAIMA argues that the government's announcement of a Computer-Based Test (CBT) format from 2027 misses the point: systemic structural failures — not the paper format alone — caused the leak.
- The NTA's internal systems failed to detect the breach; it was Rajasthan Police's Special Operations Group that uncovered the leaked "guess paper," revealing the absence of internal audit or vigilance mechanisms within NTA.
- The Supreme Court, through the 2024 Vanshika Yadav judgment, had already directed reforms that formed the basis of the Radhakrishnan Committee's work — yet none were implemented before the 2026 examination.
Static Topic Bridges
e-Governance and Digital Security in Public Administration
E-governance encompasses the use of information and communication technology by government agencies to deliver services, exchange information, and conduct transactions. In high-stakes examination systems, it includes digital paper transmission, biometric identity verification, and encrypted question paper management.
- The Radhakrishnan Committee (2024) recommended encrypted question papers transmitted digitally for on-site printing only shortly before examinations — eliminating physical transit as a vulnerability window.
- It also recommended Aadhaar-linked biometric verification replacing manual checks, a "Digi-exam" system for end-to-end candidate identity tracking, and a "Red Team / Blue Team" ethical hacker model for continuous vulnerability testing.
- The NTA instead continued to rely on a "massive, outdated physical chain of custody" through private contractors, leaving papers vulnerable during transit and storage.
- GPS tracking and signal jammers — deployed as "modern" safeguards — were characterised by FAIMA as "cosmetic" measures that do not address the fundamental vulnerability: the paper existed in physical, unencrypted form for hours before the exam.
Connection to this news: The failure is not merely technological but institutional: the NTA lacked the internal architecture to implement, monitor, or audit the very digital safeguards it was directed to adopt. This is a governance failure at the intersection of e-governance policy and regulatory capacity.
Regulatory Capacity and Institutional Design
A regulator's effectiveness depends on its organisational capacity — permanent staffing, independent audit functions, internal vigilance, and clear lines of accountability. "Outsourcing" core functions to private contractors without robust oversight creates systemic risk.
- The NTA currently relies heavily on contractual personnel for examination conduct, question paper setting, and centre management — the Radhakrishnan Committee flagged this as a risk to consistent operational standards.
- The NTA had no internal mechanism to detect the 2026 paper leak; the breach was discovered externally by Rajasthan Police.
- The Committee recommended a "presiding officer" from NTA at each centre as overall in-charge — a basic accountability measure that had not been implemented.
- The NTA Director General's statement — that the agency would conduct CBT "if the health ministry gives us in writing" — revealed a structural ambiguity in the NTA's mandate and relationship with its parent ministry.
Connection to this news: This represents a classic case of "regulatory capture" at a micro level: the NTA's dependence on private contractors and its deference to ministry directives created an institution incapable of proactive self-regulation. FAIMA's petition argues that structural incapacity — not individual malfeasance alone — is the root cause.
Supreme Court's Supervisory Jurisdiction over Examinations
The Supreme Court has established a pattern of direct supervisory intervention in national examination conduct, especially where constitutional rights of lakhs of aspirants are engaged.
- In Vanshika Yadav vs. Union of India (2024), the Supreme Court found that year's paper leak geographically contained but warned the NTA "cannot afford to misstep" and that "flip-flops are anathema to fairness."
- The court issued detailed directions on: strongroom security protocols, material transportation standards, invigilator oversight, and OMR submission timelines.
- These directions formed the basis for the Radhakrishnan Committee's 101 recommendations.
- None of these court-directed reforms were implemented before the NEET-UG 2026 examination — a contempt argument that FAIMA may raise before the court.
Connection to this news: The FAIMA petition is partly premised on the NTA's failure to comply with the Supreme Court's own 2024 directions — making this not just a policy failure but potentially a contempt of court issue.
Key Facts & Data
- NEET-UG 2026, conducted May 3, 2026 for 22.79 lakh candidates, was cancelled on May 12 after CBI confirmed a paper leak.
- Re-examination is scheduled for June 21, 2026; CBT mode announced for 2027 onwards.
- The Radhakrishnan Committee (June 2024) submitted 101 recommendations; none of the critical security architecture changes were implemented.
- Rajasthan Police's SOG discovered a "guess paper" with approximately 410 matching questions, with material worth ~600 of 720 marks allegedly circulated.
- Coaching networks across Nashik, Gurugram, Jaipur, and Sikar distributed materials labelled "VIP sets," charging candidates substantial fees.
- NEET-PG is already a Computer-Based Test — yet face score tampering allegations, showing CBT alone is not sufficient without structural reforms.
- FAIMA's petition names the NTA, Union Government, and CBI as respondents.
- The NTA requires approximately 20 shifts to accommodate 22+ lakh candidates for a CBT — necessitating score normalisation already used for JEE Main.