Justice Vikram Nath and S.V.N. Vacation bench of. Bhatti remarked that even "0.001 per cent negligence" in the conduct of the NEET exam should be dealt with thoroughly and the matter should not be dealt with as adversarial litigation.

The apex court also highlighted the ill-effects arising from a situation where a candidate becomes a doctor after cheating the system.

It said that if there is any mistake, NTA should admit it and take corrective action to maintain public confidence in the conduct of competitive examinations.

In response, the NTA said that no adverse opinion should be formed based on speculation until it files an appropriate reply before the court.

Giving two weeks time to NTA to respond to the petition alleging various irregularities in the NEET (UG) exam, the Supreme Court ordered tagging the petition with the pending batch of petitions coming up for hearing on July 8. Gave.

According to the Economic Offenses Unit (EOU) of Bihar Police, two accused on Sunday confessed to their role in the question paper leak.

The top court had last week said that it would not approve any kind of unilateral CBI investigation in this case. However, it had asked the NTA to file its reply on the fresh petitions demanding a CBI/SIT probe into the paper leak allegation within two weeks.