
New Delhi: A medical association has moved the Supreme Court, alleging ‘systemic failure’ in the conduct of the NEET-UG 2026 exam for admissions in undergraduate medical courses and seeking reforms in the test system following the cancellation of the exam over irregularities.
The NEET (UG) 2026 exam held May 3 by the National Testing Agency (NTA) was cancelled May 12 amid allegations of paper leak, which is now being probed by the CBI.
The Federation of All India Medical Association (FAIMA), through lawyer Tanvi Dubey, has moved the top court seeking a complete overhaul of the national testing framework, including the replacement of the NTA with a more robust and autonomous body.
The plea also referred to news reports that “guess papers” circulating on encrypted platforms like WhatsApp and Telegram matched more than 100 questions from the actual exam paper.
It urged the top court to direct the government to replace the NTA with a “technologically advanced and autonomous body” to restore the integrity of medical entrance exams.
FAIMA also asked the court to constitute a high-powered monitoring committee, chaired by a retired Supreme Court judge and including cybersecurity and forensic experts, to oversee the re-conduct of the 2026 exam.
The cancellation of the exam has left over 22 lakh medical aspirants and their families anxious about the next steps, including the fresh examination date, admit cards, examination centres and the counselling timeline.
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