CivilsWisdom.
Updated · Today
Polity & Governance May 21, 2026 4 min read Daily brief · #6 of 41

What central exam body told Parliamentary panel on NEET-UG cancellation

The National Testing Agency (NTA) appeared before a Parliamentary Standing Committee to explain the circumstances surrounding the NEET-UG paper leak and the ...


What Happened

  • The National Testing Agency (NTA) appeared before a Parliamentary Standing Committee to explain the circumstances surrounding the NEET-UG paper leak and the examination's subsequent cancellation.
  • The NTA's Director General stated that the paper leak did not originate from the agency's internal systems, and that the Central Bureau of Investigation (CBI) is conducting the probe into the leak.
  • The Parliamentary Committee — the Committee on Government Assurances — heard views from the Education Secretary, NTA Director General, and CBI Director, and emphasised the need to plug loopholes and ensure examination sanctity.
  • A High-Level Expert Committee, chaired by former ISRO Chairman Dr. K. Radhakrishnan, had been constituted to recommend reforms to NTA's examination mechanism, data security protocols, and organisational structure.
  • The NEET-UG examination was cancelled and rescheduled for June 21, with new security safeguards briefed to the Committee.

Static Topic Bridges

National Testing Agency (NTA): Mandate and Institutional Accountability

The National Testing Agency was established in November 2017, registered as a society under the Societies Registration Act, 1860, with the mandate of conducting entrance examinations in an efficient, transparent, and error-free manner. It is an autonomous body under the Ministry of Education. Among its examinations, NEET-UG is the single national entrance test for admission to undergraduate medical courses, mandated under Section 14 of the National Medical Commission (NMC) Act, 2019. NTA has faced repeated controversy over examination integrity, raising questions about institutional design, audit mechanisms, and accountability frameworks.

  • NTA established: November 2017; began NEET-UG from 2019.
  • Legal basis for NEET-UG: Section 14, National Medical Commission Act, 2019.
  • Registered under: Societies Registration Act, 1860.
  • Administrative parent: Ministry of Education.
  • NEET-UG covers admission to MBBS, BDS, AYUSH, and other undergraduate medical programmes across all medical institutions in India.

Connection to this news: The NTA's appearance before a Parliamentary Committee and the CBI probe reflect institutional accountability mechanisms being triggered after systemic failure — a case study in governance gaps when autonomous examination bodies lack sufficient external oversight.

Parliamentary Committees: Oversight Function

Parliamentary Standing Committees are permanent committees of Parliament with subject-matter jurisdiction mirroring central ministries. They scrutinise legislation, demand grants, and review the working of ministries — an exercise of parliamentary oversight over the executive. The Committee on Government Assurances specifically examines assurances given by ministers on the floor of the House and monitors whether those assurances have been implemented. When examination irregularities reach a scale affecting lakhs of students, parliamentary committees serve as a non-judicial forum for accountability, information elicitation, and policy recommendation.

  • There are 24 Departmentally Related Standing Committees (DRSCs) of Parliament.
  • Committees can summon ministers, secretaries, and heads of autonomous bodies.
  • They submit reports to Parliament, which may lead to policy changes.
  • They function under Rules of Procedure and Conduct of Business in Lok Sabha (Rules 331A–331M).

Connection to this news: The NTA's briefing to the Committee illustrates the oversight role of parliamentary committees over autonomous bodies — a recurring UPSC theme on the accountability deficit in India's regulatory and testing infrastructure.

NEET-UG: Equity, Access, and Federalism Dimensions

NEET-UG, introduced as a single national entrance exam, replaced a fragmented system of state-level medical entrance tests. While it promotes meritocracy and reduces the burden of multiple examinations, it has generated ongoing federalism tensions — several states have argued that NEET disadvantages students educated under state-board curricula and from rural or economically weaker backgrounds. The Supreme Court has upheld NEET's constitutional validity. The paper leak controversy added a new dimension: even a unified exam can be captured by organised criminal networks, raising systemic equity questions when those with access to leaked papers gain unfair advantage over lakhs of bona fide candidates.

  • NEET-UG 2024 was held on May 3 and cancelled May 12 following leak allegations.
  • Approximately 24 lakh students appeared in the examination in 2024.
  • A re-test was held for 1,563 candidates as recommended by a High-Powered NTA Committee.
  • The Supreme Court took cognisance of the matter and sought a status report from NTA.
  • States like Tamil Nadu have legislated to seek NEET exemption (Tamil Nadu Admission to Undergraduate Medical Degree Courses Act, 2021 — held up by presidential assent process).

Connection to this news: The parliamentary panel's review underscores that examination integrity is both a governance failure and a social justice issue — the leaked paper directly undermined equal opportunity for the hundreds of thousands who prepared without any unfair advantage.

Key Facts & Data

  • NTA established: November 2017; NEET-UG conducted by NTA since 2019.
  • Legal basis: Section 14 of the National Medical Commission Act, 2019.
  • NEET-UG 2024: held May 3, cancelled May 12 after leak allegations.
  • Re-test: conducted for 1,563 candidates per High-Powered NTA Committee recommendation.
  • Rescheduled NEET-UG: June 21 (post-cancellation).
  • High-Level Expert Committee: chaired by Dr. K. Radhakrishnan (former ISRO Chairman).
  • Oversight body: Committee on Government Assurances, Parliament of India.
  • Investigating agency: Central Bureau of Investigation (CBI).
  • Approximately 24 lakh students appeared in NEET-UG 2024.
On this page
  1. What Happened
  2. Static Topic Bridges
  3. National Testing Agency (NTA): Mandate and Institutional Accountability
  4. Parliamentary Committees: Oversight Function
  5. NEET-UG: Equity, Access, and Federalism Dimensions
  6. Key Facts & Data
Display