New Delhi: An important hearing was held in the Supreme Court on Monday in the NEET paper leak case. During the hearing, the Supreme Court said that one thing is clear and it cannot be denied that the paper was leaked. After this comment of the Supreme Court, the question now is whether the NEET exam will be held again. The Supreme Court has sought a status report from the CBI on this entire matter and has also asked questions to the NTA. The Supreme Court has asked for questions after questions and said that bring answers to all the questions on July 11. The Supreme Court said that if the scope of the leak is big, then we will not hesitate to cancel the exam and conduct the exam again.
Whether there will be a re-examination or not will be known on July 11
Now on Thursday i.e. July 11, it will be completely clear whether the NEET exam will be held again or not. If the number of students who benefited from the paper leak is large, then there is every possibility that the NEET exam will be held again. However, a lot will also depend on what reply is filed in the Supreme Court. During Monday's hearing, the Supreme Court asked many tough questions to NTA.
How many students benefited from this?
The questions asked by the Supreme Court include how many students have benefited from the paper leak. When and at what time did the paper leak happen and after how much time did the exam start. The Supreme Court said that if the scope of the paper leak is wide and has happened through electronic means, then it is like a forest fire.
If the paper is leaked through social media then…
The Supreme Court said that if the sanctity of the medical entrance exam NEET-UG 2024 has been destroyed and if its leaked question paper has been circulated through social media, then a re-examination will have to be ordered. The bench of Chief Justice DY Chandrachud, Justice JB Pardiwala and Justice Manoj Mishra also said that if the paper has been leaked through Telegram, WhatsApp and electronic means, then it is likely to spread like wildfire.
`; articlesDiv.innerHTML += articleHTML; }); } // Initialize and render feeds fetchAndRenderFeeds();