A 22-year-old medical aspirant, Pradeep Meghwal, allegedly died by suicide on Friday in Rajasthan’s Sikar district, driven by severe emotional distress following the cancellation of the NEET-UG 2026 examination. Pradeep, a resident of Gudha Godji town in Jhunjhunu district, had spent three years preparing for the test and expected to score around 650 marks out of 720.
The National Testing Agency (NTA) scrapped the May 3 exam following extensive paper leak allegations, throwing the futures of 22 lakh candidates into uncertainty. While the government has scheduled a re-examination for June 21 and initiated a CBI investigation, Pradeep’s family is devastated, pointing to systemic failures. Local authorities have registered a case, and political leaders are demanding strict, time-bound accountability for the paper leak scandal that has severely impacted students’ mental health.
Shattered Dreams and Systemic Crises
Pradeep was found hanging in his rented accommodation on Piprali Road, Sikar, which he shared with his sisters. According to Udyog Nagar Police Station House Officer (SHO) Rajesh Kumar, the incident occurred when one sister was away at coaching and the other was in the bathroom.
“His sister later found him hanging, brought him down, and informed the landlord and police,” the SHO stated, confirming that an investigation has begun. Pradeep’s father, Rajesh Kumar, a financially struggling laborer, expressed their absolute devastation, revealing that the family had invested their entire savings of ₹8 lakh to ₹11 lakh and even sold agricultural land to fund his education.
“His paper had gone very well this time. We were expecting over 650 marks and believed he would finally become a doctor. After hearing about the paper leak and cancellation, he became deeply disturbed,” his father told officials.
A Growing Crisis Among Medical Aspirants
The cancellation of the NEET-UG 2026 examination on May 12 has triggered a wave of despair across India, with Pradeep’s tragic death being part of a larger mental health crisis. Similar student suicides linked to the post-cancellation trauma have been reported in New Delhi and Uttar Pradesh’s Lakhimpur Kheri.
The sudden disruption has drawn sharp reactions from across the political spectrum. Former Rajasthan Deputy Chief Minister Sachin Pilot stated on X, “The suicide of Pradeep is deeply tragic. Anxiety regarding the NEET 2026 paper leak has placed immense pressure on students and directly impacted their mental health.” He also demanded a time-bound CBI probe rather than a “token gesture.”
Meanwhile, Union Education Minister Dharmendra Pradhan has maintained that the government has “zero tolerance” for irregularities, and over 45 individuals have already been detained in Rajasthan in connection with the leak.
The Logical Indian’s Perspective
At The Logical Indian, we believe that no exam or academic ambition is worth a human life, and our hearts bleed for Pradeep’s family and thousands of others trapped in this systemic nightmare. This tragedy highlights a deeper, more malicious rot within our national education framework, where a ruthless “paper leak mafia” can casually weaponise loopholes, leaving honest, hardworking students from marginalised backgrounds to pay with their lives.
We urgently appeal to the government and testing authorities to shift away from a high-stakes, hyper-competitive ecosystem that prioritises rigid metrics over human empathy and harmony. It is time to implement robust mental health support systems within coaching hubs and build an educational atmosphere rooted in kindness, dialogue, and emotional security, rather than structural despair.
NEET परीक्षा की तैयारी कर रहे झुंझुनूं जिले के गुढ़ागौड़जी निवासी छात्र प्रदीप की आत्महत्या बेहद दुःखद है। इसी प्रकार गोवा और उत्तर प्रदेश से NEET 2026 पेपर लीक से जुड़ी घटनाओं के बाद छात्रों की आत्महत्याओं की खबरें मन को विचलित करने वाली हैं। मैं शोक संतप्त परिवारों के प्रति…
— Sachin Pilot (@SachinPilot) May 15, 2026










