Hindustan Times (Jalandhar)

PUNJAB SET TO LOSE 250 MBBS SEATS

Gian Sagar and Chintpurni pvt medical colleges with 100 and 150 seats, respective­ly, stare at closure

- Vivek Gupta vivek.gupta@hindustant­imes.com

Punjab is set to lose 250 MBBS seats in the coming session as the fate of Gian Sagar Medical College at Banur near Patiala and Chintpurni Medical College near Pathankot hang in the balance. Punjab has 1,375 undergradu­ate medical seats in three government medical colleges and six private ones, all affiliated to the Faridkot-based Baba Farid University of Health Sciences, besides a private medical university in Bathinda.

CHANDIGARH: Punjab is set to lose 250 MBBS seats in the coming session as the fate of Gian Sagar Medical College at Banur near Patiala and Chintpurni Medical College near Pathankot hang in the balance.

Punjab has 1,375 undergradu­ate medical seats in three government medical colleges and six private ones, all affiliated to the Faridkot-based Baba Farid University of Health Sciences, besides a private medical university in Bathinda (see box).

Of them, Gian Sagar Medical College with 100 MBBS seats has been served a show-cause notice by the Punjab government for financial mismanagem­ent. The deadline for it to reply to the notice ends on Monday. A final decision is expected after that.

Punjab National Bank took symbolic possession of the college on Tuesday due to its failure of pay pending loan amounting to over Rs 45 crore.

Chintpurni Medical College with 150 MBBS seats has been in trouble ever since its inception in 2011. Its first batch of students was shifted on the orders of the Punjab and Haryana high court in 2015. A similar petition of the second batch of students enrolled in 2014 is pending in the court.

Punjab chief minister Captain Amarinder Singh on Tuesday told the state medical education department to put the college on closure notice.

A senior official said the showcause notice will be sent soon to Chintpurni Medical College for withdrawin­g government permission­s, including the approval to run medical courses.

LOSS FOR STUDENTS

National Eligibilit­y and Entrance Test (NEET) trainer Dr Arvind Goyal said the shutting down of both colleges will be a huge loss for medical aspirants. “But I don’t blame the state government for their closure since they could not maintain the required infrastruc­ture and academic standards to produce quality doctors over the years,” he said

Dr Goyal said it is better not to have colleges than leave medical students in the lurch due to mismanagem­ent by management­s.

Dr Neena Singhal, a Patialabas­ed parent of a medical aspirant seeking admission in the coming session, said, “It is unfortunat­e to see the loss of so many medical seats in Punjab. These colleges should not have been allowed to run in the first place rather than de-recognisin­g them later.”

To maintain the standard in medical education, the government should invest in new colleges besides monitoring colleges in private sector regularly, she said.

“The latest announceme­nt of the Punjab government to start a medical college in Mohali with 100 seats is a welcome step,” Dr Goyal added.

THE STATE HAS 1,375 SEATS IN THREE GOVERNMENT AND SIX PRIVATE COLLEGES

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