NEET Aspirant From Nagpur Assigned Exam Centre in Abu Dhabi
Quick Look
- An 18-year-old NEET aspirant from Nagpur, Abdullah Mohammad Talib, was shocked to find his exam centre assigned to Abu Dhabi, 2,500 km away, despite not having a passport.
- The National Testing Agency (NTA) assured rectification, but the error persists days before the exam, causing distress to the family.
AI-generated summary
Why It Matters
An 18-year-old NEET aspirant from Nagpur was assigned an exam centre in Abu Dhabi, despite not having a passport. This error by the National Testing Agency (NTA) has caused significant distress to the family with the exam just days away.
An 18-year-old NEET aspirant from Nagpur, Abdullah Mohammad Talib, got a shock when he saw his recently generated hall ticket: his examination centre was in Abu Dhabi, 2,500 km away, and he doesn't have a passport.
The National Testing Agency does provide exam centres abroad, but these are usually for NRI and international students.
The hall ticket, generated on June 14, listed the Abu Dhabi Indian School as his exam centre.
The family immediately contacted the NTA helpline, where an official assured them the error would be rectified. However, with two days left for the exam, NTA has yet to correct the mistake.
The Talib family said they were so worried they began arranging travel documents and flight tickets if the exam centre was not changed.
The parents were concerned about arranging a passport and travel at such short notice.
Talib was already under stress after the NEET paper leak and had not fully recovered from the setback.
The hall ticket error added to the trauma.
NTA officials did not respond to TOI queries.
However, sources said widespread changes may not be possible at this stage.
Meanwhile, several parents reported their children's exam centres had been changed in the hall ticket despite not opting for any of the allotted centres.
After the NEET examination was cancelled last month, NTA had sent messages to registered mobile numbers of parents and students asking whether they wanted to retain their existing centre or choose a new one.
NTA had also sought bank details for a refund of the Rs 2,500 exam fee, parents said.
No new fee has been charged.
Many parents claimed they selected the option to keep the original exam centre, especially those located in Nagpur city limits.
However, after downloading fresh hall tickets, some found their centres in far-flung locations, even in other districts.
What to Watch
AI outlook — possibilities, not facts
NTA will likely change the exam centre to a location within India.
Likely · Within days
Further administrative errors in NTA exam assignments may be revealed.
Possible · Within weeks
Open Questions
- Will the NTA rectify the error before the exam?
- What caused this specific error and others reported?
- What is the NTA's contingency plan for such errors?