
Fri Jul 04 08:23:43 UTC 2025: ## News Article Summary:
**Madras High Court Upholds NEET-UG 2025 Results, Denies Re-Examination for Disrupted Centers**
The Madras High Court has affirmed a previous ruling against re-conducting the National Eligibility-cum-Entrance Test – Undergraduate (NEET-UG) 2025 for students who experienced power disruptions at their examination centers due to heavy rains on May 4th. A Division Bench dismissed an appeal from candidates arguing that the power outage compromised exam conditions. The court cited evidence, including CCTV footage and a statistical analysis from an independent expert committee, demonstrating that the disruptions had negligible impact on student performance. The court emphasized the need to uphold the integrity of the exam and the potential disruption a re-examination would cause to the ranking of over two million students. The decision supports the National Testing Agency’s (NTA) assessment that a re-test is unwarranted.
## Rewritten News Article:
**Madras High Court Rejects Call for NEET Re-Exam Over Power Outages**
**Chennai, July 4, 2025** – The Madras High Court has definitively ruled against re-conducting the National Eligibility-cum-Entrance Test – Undergraduate (NEET-UG) 2025 for students who sat the exam at centers affected by power outages during heavy rains on May 4th. A Division Bench, consisting of Justices J. Nisha Banu and M. Jothiraman, dismissed an appeal lodged by a group of candidates who claimed the power disruption compromised exam conditions.
The court sided with arguments presented by Additional Solicitor General A.R.L. Sundaresan, who presented evidence, including CCTV footage from the affected centers, demonstrating that sufficient daylight allowed for continued examination, even during the outage. Furthermore, Sundaresan highlighted the performance of students at those centers, noting that many answered a significant number of questions, indicating minimal disruption.
Crucially, the court cited an independent expert committee’s analysis, commissioned by the National Testing Agency (NTA), which found no statistically significant impact on student performance due to the power outages.
“This court is of the opinion that it is crucial to uphold the integrity of the educational assessments,” the Division Bench stated in its ruling. The judges further emphasized the significant disruption a re-examination would cause to the ranking of over two million students who took the NEET-UG 2025.
The court concluded that the NTA’s decision, based on field verification and statistical analysis, was not arbitrary, mala fide, or illegal, and therefore upheld the original ruling denying a re-test. This decision brings closure to the controversy surrounding the NEET-UG 2025, ensuring the established ranking stands.