Ahead of retest, NEET glitches trouble students; two nabbed for promising paper
Meanwhile, Union home secretary Govind Mohan reviewed the preparedness of state govts for the NEET(UG) retest with a special focus on student convenience, security arrangements, and the integrity of the process. He directed states and central agencies to ensure that security protocols are strictly followed. NTA said it is working towards resolving all issues, including refunds. Till Monday morning, over four lakh aspirants had downloaded their admit cards.
This summary was generated by PolitGlobe's AI pipeline from publicly available reporting at Times of India. For the full original article, visit the source below.
Read full article at Times of IndiaRelated coverage
SC notice to Centre, Punjab over failure to implement RTE
Though RTE and RTI were among the main planks on which AAP acquired political salience at national level, the PIL by Jagmohan Singh Raju said RTE Act’s mandate for a quota of 25% for children belonging to weaker and disadvantaged sections of society in schools remained largely unimplemented in state.
NCERT to restore original ‘Dancing Girl’ of Mohenjo-daro in class IX textbooks
The image appears in the opening chapter, “History of Arts”, of Madhurima, NCERT’s new class IX arts education textbook. In the version carried in the textbook, the torso of the figurine appears visually altered compared to photographs of the original artefact, with shading used across the upper body that obscures anatomical details visible in the sculpture.
Modi trip a signal about Delhi’s reading of a fractured Europe as well as Slovakia
Two-way trade, which first crossed $1 billion in 2024, reached $1.8 billion last year, with Indian exports of roughly $1.52 billion dwarfing imports of $284 million. That Modi chose this moment to visit Slovakia, becoming the first Indian prime minister to do so in 33 years, says as much about New Delhi’s reading of a fractured Europe as it does about Bratislava.
Congress open to 'ghar wapsi' of ex-members
Congress open to 'ghar wapsi' of ex-members