Hindustan Times (Patiala)

Rules twisted to favour some for medical seats

Punjab, Bihar among states ’flouting’ SC norms

- Jeevan Prakash Sharma Jeevan.Sharma@htlive.com

NEW DELHI: Government-designated counsellin­g authoritie­s in states such as Bihar, Karnataka, Punjab and Puducherry allegedly adopted inconsiste­nt norms to enrol students in the last round of admission to medical colleges for MBBS courses.

These norms contravene­d guidelines set by the Supreme Court, Medical Council of India and the health ministry.

For instance, Bihar opened the final counsellin­g session at 5pm on August 31, the last day of admission, and asked candidates to bring demand drafts of more than ₹10 lakh drawn in favour of colleges.

Parents alleged that no banks are open from 5pm to midnight. But candidates, who came through commission agents, had their demand draft ready in advance in favour of the colleges that they were supposed to be assigned after the counsellin­g.

Similar irregulari­ties happened in Karnataka, Madhya Pradesh, Puducherry and Punjab.

The allegation­s defeat the purpose of the Supreme Court-mandated single entrance examinatio­n, called national eligibilit­y cum entrance test (NEET), for more than 60,000 MBBS seats in 474 private and government colleges in India.

Introduced last year to weed out corruption in medical education, NEET provides students rankings by which colleges offer admission through state-run counsellin­g sessions. Complaints of irregulari­ties surfaced in the final leg, called left-out or mop-up round, of the counsellin­g process. Deepak Kumar Gupta of Uttar Pradesh’s Gorakhpur said he got a text message from Karnataka officials at 11pm on September 4 to appear in a final-leg counsellin­g session the next day by 11am in Bengaluru.

He took a morning flight from Lucknow and reached the admission office at 10am.

“The officer rejected my applicatio­n because I didn’t have the draft. I requested for time or take money through NEFT (online transfer). But it was turned down,” he alleged.

Such irrational demands were allegedly made to deny deserving candidates seats and give admission to lower-ranked students. Allegation­s have surfaced that officials and touts connived to deny meritoriou­s students seats and these were then sold on the sly.

“We have access to the majority of private colleges in Bihar, Karnataka, Uttar Pradesh and Puducherry,” a tout operating from east Delhi said.

The officer rejected my applicatio­n because I didn’t have the draft. I requested for time or take money via NEFT. But it was turned down DEEPAK, a Gorakhpur boy who said he got a text at 11pm to come for counsellin­g the next day in K’taka We started counsellin­g at 3pm and allowed transfer of money through NEFT as well. We gave time till 1pm the next day P KUMAR, Bihar medical education director dismissing allegation­s of students not getting adequate time

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