Deccan Chronicle

Save NEET exam seats

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The unraveling of a scam involving the national entrance test for medical and dental seats — the NEET — dips with irony as Tamil Nadu has emerged as the hotbed of exam impersonat­ion. The state was stoutly opposing the national test for long and its aspirants are now forced to take NEET for medical seats even in their own state. A handful of them have taken the wrong route to try and qualify by employing proxy candidates to write the exam for them. The racket, uncovered by an anonymous email to college authoritie­s in rural Tamil Nadu, led to an intense investigat­ion exposing a big impersonat­ion racket by which a better qualified candidate takes the exam and also goes through the counseling process before the aspirant joins the college with deft handling of admission documents. The scam may have touched many states, including Kerala, where a man running a NEET coaching centre is a suspect. The Madras high court expressed the opinion that many more states could be involved.

The sanctity of holding national examinatio­ns for medical and engineerin­g seats could be undermined by such malpractic­es. It is a wonder that such deception is being made possible because the system has not yet integrated methods like biometrics and facial recognitio­n software for proper identifica­tion of aspirants. The National Testing Agency, entrusted with conducting such a crucial exam as NEET, to identify the best candidates to take up medicine and surgery as a career, has a lot to answer for. While candidates are put through the wringer for eliminatin­g any bluetooth connectivi­ty and “bit” notes hidden in shoes, etc, the authoritie­s have not done enough to eliminate fraud by impersonat­ion. There are only around 71,000 MBBS seats in the country and the supply can never meet the demand, which means that authoritie­s have to be extra careful about eliminatin­g fraud in the selection process.

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