INTERNATIONAL — June 22, 2026
2.3 Million Students Retake India's Medical Entrance Exam After Leak Scandal
The retest was conducted at 5,440 centers with biometric verification, body searches, drones, signal jammers and more than 1.3 million CCTV cameras after allegations of leaks and irregularities prompted the original exam's cancellation.
The Ehtebar Desk — originates with Khaama Press — 2 min read

Approximately 2.3 million students retook India's NEET medical entrance exam on Sunday. The retest was held after the original examination was canceled due to allegations of a question paper leak.
Security arrangements were extensive at the 5,440 examination centers. Police and paramilitary forces were deployed, along with biometric verification, body searches, drones, surveillance systems and signal-jamming devices. More than 1.3 million CCTV cameras monitored over 95,000 examination rooms.
The retest followed allegations of irregularities and leaks that triggered public outrage and protests. The incident has renewed concerns about the integrity of India's competitive examination system and prompted demands for accountability.
Officials implemented the enhanced security measures to prevent any further issues during the Sunday examination. The scale of the operation reflected efforts to address the problems that led to the cancellation of the initial test.
Students participated in the retake amid the ongoing controversy over the handling of the medical entrance process. The event has drawn attention to the challenges facing large-scale competitive exams in the country.
Read the original reporting at Khaama Press →
Reliability assessment
Single source provides concrete, checkable details including specific numbers of students, centers and cameras; reports attributed to officials and Indian media
The source language mixes facts with framing or advocacy wording. Khaama Press: "triggered public outrage, student protests and demands for accountability"; "renewed concerns about transparency and integrity"; "undermine confidence in merit-based admissions" — these phrases introduce emotional framing and value judgments on the scandal's impact.
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International — NEET exam, India medical entrance, exam leak scandal, retest, student protests
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