Hindustan Times (Delhi)

JD(U) faction may expel Nitish

- Srinand Jha srinandjha@hindustant­imes.com

A group of Janta Dal (United) leaders are considerin­g expelling their president Nitish Kumar, sources in the party said on Thursday, threatenin­g to bring into open a growing resentment against the Bihar chief minister who dramatical­ly dumped the party’s old alliance partners last month to realign with the BJP.

Former JD(U) president Sharad Yadav, the second-most prominent face in the party, is regarded as the head of the faction unhappy with Kumar’s decision. Yadav was set to begin on Thursday a three-day tour of Bihar in which he will meet members of the party.

“Kumar’s unilateral decision to walk out of the Mahagathba­ndhan violates the mandate of the 2015 assembly elections. Twelve state unit presidents met Yadav recently to condemn the decision. We are exploring legal and constituti­onal options (on expelling Kumar as the party president)”, former party general secretary Arun Srivastava said.

Srivastava was suspended on Tuesday for his “anti-party activity” in appointing an election agent for the recent Rajya Sabha by-polls in Gujarat without consulting the party president.

The fight between MLAs loyal to Kumar and those backing Yadav is likely to lead to a showdown at the party’s August 19 national executive meeting.

Kumar’s hold over the party rank and file is expected to be tested at the Patna meeting of the party national executive on August 19. The rebel faction, sources said, have planned sharp attacks against Kumar over his decision to align with the saffron party.

There should be a common question paper for all aspirants taking NEET exam — a common window test for private and government medical colleges — the Supreme Court said on Thursday.

A bench headed by justice Dipak Misra asked CBSE to explain how it proposes to have identical questions as it pulled up the board for setting different papers for students taking NEET in regional languages.

“There should be one question paper for all aspirants. The main paper can be in English and questions can be translated into regional languages,” the bench told CBSE lawyer, additional solicitor general Maninder Singh. CBSE was asked to set out in its affidavit how it will carry out NEET in the future while ensuring the difficulty level in questions is maintained.

The three-judge bench was hearing a petition filed by NGO Sankalp Charitable Trust on whose plea SC had last year ruled that NEET would be the single-window exam to admit medical students in all colleges.

The petitioner’s lawyer, senior advocate Indira Jaising, said the standard of question papers in English and regional languages was different. She cited data and ratio between the number of students who took NEET in English/Hindi and the equivalent ratio with respect to students who qualified in support of her submission. She argued that questions in regional languages were not identical to questions in Hindi and English and there was a difference in difficulty level.

The Medical Council of India (MCI) informed court that questions were first prepared in English and then translated into Hindi. Since experts were not available to translate questions, different questions with similar difficulty level were set.

The court listed the matter for hearing on October 10.

THE MEDICAL COUNCIL OF INDIA INFORMED COURT THAT QUESTIONS WERE FIRST PREPARED IN ENGLISH AND THEN TRANSLATED INTO HINDI

 ?? PTI PHOTO ?? Senior JD(U) leader Sharad Yadav arrives in Patna on Thursday.
PTI PHOTO Senior JD(U) leader Sharad Yadav arrives in Patna on Thursday.

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