Hindustan Times (Delhi)

SC rejects petition seeking NEET deferment

- Abraham Thomas letters@hindustant­imes.com

The Supreme Court on Monday turned down a plea seeking deferment of the National Eligibilit­y Entrance Test (NEET) for medical college admissions scheduled on September 12, noting that any interferen­ce by the court will cause “pain and strain” to nearly 1.6 million candidates who have registered for the examinatio­n.

The court instead asked the petitionin­g students to appeal to National Testing Agency (NTA) to consider their request for deferment or let them opt out this time and take another shot at the examinatio­n later.

The decision to hold NEET for

NEW DELHI:

MBBS/BDS admissions was taken by the Centre on July 13. “If the authoritie­s are willing to do it on their own, we won’t come in their way. But do not use our platform to push them,” said the bench of justices AM Khanwilkar, Hrishikesh Roy and CT Ravikumar.

The petition sought deferment because some of the students writing the exam would also have to appear for Odisha Joint Entrance Examinatio­n (JEE) on September 6 and CBSE Class 12 physics compartmen­t/improvemen­t examinatio­n on September 9. Advocate M Shoeb Alam appearing for the petitioner­s informed the court that the NTA had deferred Session 4 of JEE from July 27 to late August and could similarly consider deferring NEET.

“Let the exam go on. This will amount to too much of meddling with education. We should now redefine the scope of our judicial review. Because of inconvenie­nce of some, 16 lakh students should not suffer...,” the bench said. The court also noted the logistical challenges of planning and arranging for the examinatio­n centres.

But the court offered an alternativ­e. “If the petitioner­s so desire, are free to make representa­tion(s) to the competent authority who may consider the representa­tion(s) on its own merits and in accordance with law at the earliest,” it said.

The top court also directed the University Grants Commission (UGC) and All India Council for

Technical Education (AICTE) to provisiona­lly accommodat­e students appearing in the CBSE examinatio­n for private/compartmen­t/patrachar (correspond­ence) categories pending announceme­nt of their results by September 30.

CBSE counsel Rupesh Kumar informed the court that nearly 90,000 students were appearing for the private/patrachar/second compartmen­t and improvemen­t exams. Advocates Apoorv Kurup for UGC and Harish Pandey for AICTE informed the court that even if the results are not available before September 30 and the admission process begins, the petitioner­s and similarly placed students could apply for provisiona­l admissions.

 ??  ??

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from India