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The National Testing Agency (NTA) will soon release the response sheets and answer key for the National Eligibility-cum-Entrance Test Undergraduate (NEET UG) 2024. The exam took place on May 5. The answer key for all question paper codes will be available on the official website for NTA NEET,
exams.nta.ac.in.
The results for NEET UG are scheduled to be announced on June 14. The NEET UG 2024 was held at 4,750 exam centres across 571 cities, including 14 cities outside India, with over 24 lakh registered candidates.
The NEET UG question paper consisted of Physics, Chemistry, and Biology (Botany and Zoology). Each subject had two sections: Section A with 35 questions and Section B with 15 questions. Candidates were required to attempt any 10 questions out of the 15 in Section B.
The National Testing Agency (NTA) has refuted the claims of a paper leak in the National Eligibility-cum-Entrance Test (Undergraduate) (NEET UG) 2024 held on Sunday, terming them as "completely baseless and without any merit".
"It has been ascertained from NTA's security protocols and Standard Operating Procedures that the social media posts pointing towards any paper leak are completely baseless and without any substance," the NTA said in an official release.
The exam body stated that except for an incident in Rajasthan's Sawai Madhopur where some students forcibly took away the question papers before the conclusion of the examination, all other photos of papers circulating on social media have no relation to the actual paper.
"NTA also conducts post-exam data analysis to detect cases of Unfair Means (UFM). Action on UFM cases is taken as per extant rules, which include cancellation of candidature and debarring from future examinations," the exam body stated.
The NTA attributed the increase in the number of students appearing in the exam to the option of several smaller cities as centers, especially in the Northeast, apart from Puducherry, Jammu and Kashmir, and other states.
Several NEET-UG candidates from other states were allegedly asked to pick Gujarati as their language to enable two Gujarati individuals part of the exam process to fill out their answer sheets. These candidates were also allegedly told to show their permanent address in Gujarat, but they were from Odisha, Bihar, Maharashtra, Rajasthan and Uttar Pradesh.
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Expressing "shock" over a medical aspirant's attempt to manipulate the OMR sheet filed by her while appearing for the National Eligibility-cum-Entrance Test (NEET) UG-2023, the Delhi High Court has imposed Rs 20,000 as costs on the woman, making it clear that such an attempt cannot be tolerated in court of law. Justice Purushaindra Kumar Kaurav said he intended to impose hefty costs on the petitioner woman and to refer the matter to the police but refrained from doing so in view of her tender age.
The high court said it was shocked at the approach of the petitioner who kept insisting that the Optical Mark Recognition (OMR) sheet produced by her was original while the one shown by the National Testing Agency (NTA) to the court was not genuine.
Advt The high court said the record produced by the authorities is the official record and there was no reason to doubt its genuineness.
There is no reason to believe that NTA will fabricate or replace the marks obtained by an candidate as it has no personal stake in the exercise, it said.
"Having perused the entire material available on record and in view of the facts and circumstances of the case, this court intended to impose costs of Rs 2 lakh against the petitioner and also to send the matter for investigation to the police...
"...however, keeping in mind the tender age of the petitioner and various circumstances such as the pressure of the parents and peers, this court refrains from taking such a view and instead imposes costs of Rs 20,000 against the petitioner," the high court said.
The high court's judgment came on a petition by a medical aspirant from Andhra Pradesh seeking direction to NTA to produce her original OMR sheet along with the answer key of the exam, recompute her marks and publish fresh result and merit list.
The petitioner also sought direction for allotting her MBBS seat for the academic Year of NEET (UG)-2023 in any government medical college in Kerala or Andhra Pradesh.
According to the plea, NTA declared the results on June 13 and her all India rank for counselling was shown as 351. The total marks she obtained stood at 697 out of 720 with the percentile of 99.9.
Advt She submitted her rank was also recognised by Kerala State Medical Rank List-2023 and Dr. YSR University of Health Sciences, Vijayawada NEET UG Rank-wise list of the State of Andhra Pradesh.
The plea said the petitioner was shocked while registering on the Medical Counselling Committee (MCC) website when she was unable to move to the next step of registration. She claimed her aggregate marks were reduced to 103 and rank downgraded to 12,530,32 with a percentile of 38.4.
She said she made a complaint to the authorities and, when no steps were taken to redress her grievance, she approached the court.
However, NTA contended that the OMR sheet shown by the petitioner was tampered with and modified, and the responses provided by her on the it were deliberately altered in an attempt to claim higher marks in the examination.
The counsel for NTA also produced the original OMR sheet of the petitioner to the court.
The petitioner and her counsel, after perusing the original OMR sheet, still maintained it was not the actual document.
"This court is shocked with the approach of the petitioner. NTA, which is a government agency, conducts the examination where lakhs of candidates appear. In the current year of 2023, more than 20 lakhs candidates appeared," Justice Kaurav said, adding the sequence of facts and the material available on record create genuine doubt against the bonafides of the petitioner.
The NTA's counsel also told the court that the petitioner's name does not figure in the merit list, a contention she contested, insisting that her name appeared earlier but was deleted.
The judge said, "Such a stand is again unacceptable and shocking to the conscience of the court."
After comparing both the OMR sheets, the high court said, "It is to be noted that in the OMR sheet relied upon on behalf of the petitioner, a deliberate attempt has been made by the petitioner to manipulate the official record. Such an attempt cannot be tolerated in court of law".
NEW DELHI: The Supreme Court on Monday adjourned for hearing after two weeks a plea alleging OMR sheet manipulation in the NEET-UG, 2024 examination that saw alleged irregularities, malpractices and paper leak.
The top court asked the petitioner how the order be passed on the petition when the examination is already over. At the same time, it made it clear that if a re-test is ordered, then there could be a different issue.
Although, the court initially inclined to list it for hearing next week, but later fixed it after two weeks, as the lawyer for the National Testing Agency (NTA) sought deferment for two weeks, to which, the top court allowed the agency's plea.
In a similar development, five NEET-UG candidates approached the Supreme Court against re-NEET. The petitioners opposed the cancellation of the NEET-UG 2024 test, instead of re-exam. They proposed a re-evaluation of all OMR sheets to address complaints of rank inflation and tampering.
Rajan had moved the apex court seeking its direction for judicial intervention into the alleged paper leak, award of grace marks against the time loss, and irregularities that occurred during the conduct of the NEET-UG Examination.
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