New Delhi:The Delhi High Court has refused to direct the detection and removal of alleged duplicity of candidates in the rank list for this year's Joint Entrance Examination (Main) or JEE (Main). Justice Sanjeev Narula said weeding out duplications would create gaps and the entire list would thus have to be redrawn which would upset the whole selection process and open pandora's box and that such a "drastic step" can be passed when the alleged errors are "egregious enough" to "reasonably conclude that the entire list is manifestly and intrinsically flawed".
The court's order was passed on an application seeking interim relief in relation to a petition by a JEE candidate who claimed that the common rank list by National Testing Agency (NTA) was erroneous as it contained duplicity of candidates and she would become eligible for JEE (Advanced) if the list is corrected. The court noted that the online system was not able to prevent multiple registrations per candidate for the two sessions of JEE (Mains) and therefore certain candidates apparently got registered for the second session under a fresh application number which lead to candidates clearing the cut-off in both the sessions being reflected twice in the rank list.
While the petitioner produced 13 score cards where purportedly duplication occurred and argued that such instances ran into thousands, the NTA that claimed that there were only ten cases of duplications according to its parameters. The court observed that the petitioner's averment that duplication ran into thousands was a "bald assertion without any supporting material" but agreed to examine the issue further and granted time to the petitioner file a response to NTA's claim and also directed NTA is directed to give complete particulars/data to support its claim.