Kejriwal Slams NEET Authority Over Threats to Students
Synopsis
Key Takeaways
AAP convenor Arvind Kejriwal on Sunday, 19 July 2026, launched a sharp public attack on the authority responsible for conducting the National Eligibility cum Entrance Test (NEET), accusing it of threatening students with legal action after what he called a catastrophic failure in administering the examination.
What Kejriwal Said
Posting on X in a mix of Hindi and English, Kejriwal wrote: 'Dhamki mat do. Bacchon ne itni mehnat ki.' ('Don't threaten. The children worked so hard.') He accused the authority of having 'ruined the entire NEET' and called it 'a disgrace to the country.' He demanded that officials show sensitivity, humility, and helpfulness toward students rather than resorting to legal threats against them.
The post's direct, bilingual tone — switching from Hindi reproach to English condemnation — underscored the political urgency Kejriwal attached to the issue. The phrase 'You are a disgrace to the country' was directed at the unnamed official or body overseeing NEET administration.
Context: A Troubled Examination System
NEET is the sole all-India entrance test for undergraduate medical and dental admissions, mandated by a Supreme Court directive in 2013 that replaced a patchwork of state-level examinations. The National Testing Agency (NTA), an autonomous body under the Ministry of Education, is responsible for conducting the exam each year for lakhs of aspirants.
Recurring allegations of paper leaks, irregularities, and administrative lapses have dogged NEET since its nationwide rollout, triggering student protests and sustained opposition criticism. The centralised model has also been a flashpoint in centre-state tensions over education policy, with several state governments questioning the NTA's accountability.
Stakeholder Impact
For the hundreds of thousands of students who sit NEET each year, the stakes could not be higher — a single examination determines entry into the country's medical colleges. Any lapse in administration, or the perception that authorities are prioritising institutional self-protection over student welfare, compounds the anxiety of aspirants and their families.
Kejriwal's intervention, framed around the emotional and academic toll on students, is likely to amplify pressure on the Ministry of Education and the NTA to respond publicly. Opposition parties have consistently used NEET controversies to highlight what they describe as the Centre's failure to ensure fair and transparent examination systems.
What's Next
The Ministry of Education has not publicly responded to Kejriwal's post at the time of publication. Pending petitions before the Supreme Court concerning NEET's integrity and the NTA's conduct remain active, and any fresh controversy could accelerate judicial scrutiny. Political pressure from opposition leaders is expected to intensify demands for a comprehensive reform of the examination's administration and grievance redressal mechanisms.