The Supreme Court today allowed the NEET aspirants who could not write the exam due to COVID-19 restrictions to take the exam on October 14..The Bench of CJI SA Bobde with Justices AS Bopanna and V Ramasubramanian was hearing a PIL filed by the CBSE. The Court has now allowed for the NEET exam to be held to be held on October 14..Solicitor General Tushar Mehta had informed the Court that results for NEET are scheduled to be declared on October 16. .The Court has clarified that the results for all NEET aspirants will be declared on October 16..The NEET was conducted on September 13 by the National Testing Agency, after the Supreme Court dismissed various PILs filed to postpone its conduct on account of safety and logistical concerns amid the COVID-19 pandemic..The first batch of such pleas were dismissed on August 17. A review plea, urging the Court to reconsider the correctness of its August 17 ruling was also later dismissed. .On September 9, the Supreme Court dismissed fresh pleas to reconsider the conduct of the medical entrance exam in view of rising COVID-19 cases.
The Supreme Court today allowed the NEET aspirants who could not write the exam due to COVID-19 restrictions to take the exam on October 14..The Bench of CJI SA Bobde with Justices AS Bopanna and V Ramasubramanian was hearing a PIL filed by the CBSE. The Court has now allowed for the NEET exam to be held to be held on October 14..Solicitor General Tushar Mehta had informed the Court that results for NEET are scheduled to be declared on October 16. .The Court has clarified that the results for all NEET aspirants will be declared on October 16..The NEET was conducted on September 13 by the National Testing Agency, after the Supreme Court dismissed various PILs filed to postpone its conduct on account of safety and logistical concerns amid the COVID-19 pandemic..The first batch of such pleas were dismissed on August 17. A review plea, urging the Court to reconsider the correctness of its August 17 ruling was also later dismissed. .On September 9, the Supreme Court dismissed fresh pleas to reconsider the conduct of the medical entrance exam in view of rising COVID-19 cases.