INDIAN AIR FORCE Will Now Handle Exam QUESTION Papers! Indian Students Amazed
Автор: FactTechz
Загружено: 2026-05-31
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A major development in India’s education system this week is the Centre’s decision to involve the Indian Air Force (IAF) in transporting question papers for the upcoming NEET-UG 2026 re-examination. The Indian government's huge move comes after the original NEET exam held on May 3 was cancelled following allegations and investigations related to a paper leak. The re-exam is now scheduled for June 21, and the government says extraordinary measures are being taken to ensure the process is secure and leak-proof.
According to Indian Union Education Minister Dharmendra Pradhan, the government is following a “whole-of-government” approach involving the Home Ministry, state governments, security agencies, and now the Indian Air Force. The IAF is expected to assist with the transportation of confidential examination materials so that question papers can reach centres securely and on time, especially considering monsoon weather conditions and heightened security concerns.
The proposal reportedly emerged after high-level discussions involving Defence Minister Rajnath Singh, Education Minister Dharmendra Pradhan, and Communications Minister Jyotiraditya Scindia. Officials believe that using military-grade logistics and transportation systems could reduce the risk of tampering during the movement of question papers from printing facilities to examination centres across the country.
However, the decision has also triggered political debate. Opposition leaders questioned whether involving the Air Force in exam logistics reflects deeper failures in the examination system. Critics argued that civilian institutions should be capable of conducting secure national exams without requiring military assistance. Leaders from parties such as Shiv Sena (UBT) and AAP have publicly criticized the proposal, saying it raises concerns about the government's handling of examination security.
Many education experts note that the real challenge may not be transportation alone. Investigations into previous paper-leak cases have often pointed to insider involvement, printing-stage vulnerabilities, and organized cheating networks. Because of this, some analysts argue that secure transport is only one part of a much larger reform effort needed to restore trust in high-stakes examinations.
The controversy has also accelerated discussions about changing the exam format itself. The National Testing Agency (NTA) has informed the Supreme Court that NEET-UG is expected to move to a computer-based testing system from 2027, a step intended to reduce the risk of future paper leaks and modernize the examination process.
At the moment, the government's position is that using the Indian Air Force is a temporary but necessary measure to ensure that the June 21 re-exam is conducted fairly. Supporters see it as a strong signal that authorities are serious about preventing another leak, while critics view it as evidence of how severe the examination-security crisis has become.
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