Prime Minister Narendra Modi delayed his departure from the Delhi airport by 45 minutes on Sunday afternoon to ensure that his VVIP security convoy would not disrupt traffic for medical aspirants racing against the clock.

The PM’s flight landed in the capital from Kolkata at 1:15 pm. With the critical candidate entry deadline set for 1:30 pm and the exam scheduled to begin at 2:00 pm, PM Modi chose to wait inside the airport lounge until after the doors had closed and the test had officially commenced.

Union Minister Sukanta Majumdar lauded the gesture on social media, stating, “For PM Narendra Modi, power means responsibility. Choosing to wait at the airport so Neet aspirants could travel smoothly reflects a leadership style that puts citizens first."

NTA rubbishes viral leak video, warns of legal action

While the examination proceeded on the ground, a parallel battle against misinformation erupted online. The National Testing Agency (NTA) issued a public statement dismissing a viral video circulating on Telegram and X (formerly Twitter) that alleged a question paper leak or illicit sale ahead of the exam.

The NTA categorically called the clip “fake and fraudulent,” asserting that the entire examination process was concluded successfully under a flawless, multi-layered security web.

“Manufacturing and deliberately circulating such misinformation to defraud or alarm students is a serious offense,” the NTA stated.

National Testing Agency (NTA) issues a statement; says, "NTA's attention has been drawn to a fabricated video being circulated on social media regarding NEET (UG) 2026. The video is FAKE and the claims it makes are false. The examination was conducted successfully today under… pic.twitter.com/ZBKBGV0hnR— ANI (@ANI) June 22, 2026

National Testing Agency (NTA) issues a statement; says, "NTA's attention has been drawn to a fabricated video being circulated on social media regarding NEET (UG) 2026. The video is FAKE and the claims it makes are false. The examination was conducted successfully today under… pic.twitter.com/ZBKBGV0hnR

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The testing authority confirmed it is working closely with the Indian Cyber Crime Coordination Centre (I4C) and local law enforcement agencies to identify and prosecute the individuals who originated the digital hoax. Officials urged parents and students to rely exclusively on the official NTA website for authentic updates.

Following the cancellation of the original May 3 test due to integrity breaches, the NTA left nothing to chance for Sunday’s reassessment. The agency deployed a water-tight security apparatus to restore public faith in the national system:

Over 38,000 frisking staff and 48,448 biometric personnel handled face authentication at more than 5,000 centers across India and 14 international locations.

More than 1.38 lakh CCTV cameras provided real-time surveillance, while over 51,000 electronic signal jammers were installed to block digital malpractice. And the state police, paramilitary units, and the Indian Air Force were mobilised to ensure the secure transport and storage of confidential test materials.