NEET 2026 Row: When Rules Target One and Spare Another, It Stops Being Protocol

by · TFIPOST.com

The controversy at a NEET-UG 2026 examination centre in Surat has once again forced attention on a question India’s examination system cannot continue to sidestep: not whether rules exist, but whether they are applied equally.

A Hindu girl was reportedly asked to remove her Tulsi mala, a sacred religious symbol, before being allowed into the examination hall. The incident triggered objections from her father, a video of which has now circulated widely online. The National Testing Agency has since termed the episode “unacceptable” and confirmed that an inquiry is underway.

Rules are not in dispute; their application is

There is no ambiguity about the need for strict protocols in an examination of this scale. With over 22 lakh candidates competing for limited medical seats, NEET demands discipline, verification checks, and uniform entry procedures. The National Testing Agency has issued detailed guidelines on dress codes, frisking, and permitted religious items precisely to maintain order and prevent malpractice.

But rules derive authority not merely from being written, but from being applied without variation. That is where the problem begins.

According to the guidelines, articles of faith are permitted, subject to additional security checks and early reporting. The Surat incident, however, has brought forward allegations that this clarity was not reflected in practice. That gap between instruction and implementation is now under scrutiny.

The issue is consistency, not intention

When enforcement appears uneven, perception takes over from procedure. Hindu students are questioned over a sacred thread while Muslim students pass through without similar scrutiny over visible religious clothes; the issue is no longer about compliance. It becomes about consistency.

Students arriving at examination centres are not engaging with policy frameworks. They are dealing with a high-pressure moment that determines years of preparation. Even brief uncertainty at the entry point can unsettle focus and affect performance in an exam where every mark carries weight.

That is why uniformity matters. Not as an ideal, but as a requirement.

A pattern that weakens trust

This is not the first instance where such concerns have surfaced. In earlier examination cycles, candidates have reported being asked to remove religious threads or symbols, with explanations often attributed to local interpretation of rules rather than policy intent.

Each such episode, taken individually, may appear procedural. Taken together, they begin to form a pattern that is harder to dismiss. The NTA has initiated a probe into the Surat incident, but post-incident reviews do not address the core concern candidates raise on the ground: inconsistency at the point of enforcement.

Fairness must be uniform, not situational

At the heart of the matter lies a simple principle. A national examination system can only maintain credibility if its rules are applied uniformly, regardless of identity, attire or belief.

If religious symbols are permitted, they must be permitted consistently under defined safeguards. If restrictions are necessary, they must apply equally across all candidates. There is no space in such a system for situational interpretation at entry gates.

Because once enforcement begins to vary, rules stop functioning as rules. They become decisions made on a case-by-case basis. And in a system built on merit, that shift is not minor. It is fundamental.

The Surat episode is therefore not just about one candidate or one centre. It is a reminder that in high-stakes national examinations, fairness is not defined by intention or instruction alone. It is defined by consistency on the ground.