MCI cancels admission of 778 medical students
The medical education regulator has cancelled the admission of 778 MBBS students who joined private colleges in Puducherry last year for violating the Supreme Court’s guidelines, HT has learnt.
All the seven private medical colleges in the Union territory “haven’t demonstrated any evidence of fairness and transparency in the admission process...” the Medical Council of India said in a September 7, 2017 letter, cancelling the admissions.
HT has a copy of the order that came on the complaint of Puducherry lieutenant governor Kiran Bedi, who said merit had been sacrificed for money.
Bedi got complaints from parents alleging fraud and ordered a probe which found that of the 1,200 students who joined the bachelor of medicine, bachelor of surgery, or MBBS, in 2016, 778 were admitted overlooking the top court’s directives on the national eligibility-cum-entrance test (NEET).
The state-run Indira Gandhi Medical College, which has 150 seats, is in the clean as it followed the counselling guidelines.
The MCI order highlights the difficulties in cleaning up medical education, a lucrative business, in India. Some colleges continue to set aside norms for money or favour, leaving out deserving students. States have come up with arbitrary guidelines this year as well, as reported by HT , raising questions over the fairness of the process.
While restoring NEET in 2016, the top court ordered all states to designate a counselling authority to prepare a list of successful candidates.
Puducherry, too, set up a centralised admission committee (Centac) but the seven private colleges admitted students directly, ignoring the panel.
Panchapakesan Ganesan, whose daughter was denied admission, alleged that 778 admissions -- 770 under all India quota and eight in state quota – were made fraudulently.
President of Puducherry UT All Centac Students Parents Association M Narayanassamy wrote to Bedi, who asked a committee led by a retired judge, Chitra Venkatraman, to look into the charges.
Venkatraman’s report said the entire exercise violated the Supreme Court order, as students with high NEET scores were denied admission with money taking precedence over marks. “At the hands of the private medical colleges, merit has become a casualty,” Bedi said in a letter to MCI.
The parents association has questioned the MCI’s failure to act against the erring colleges.
“I am surprised why no action has been recommended by the MCI against colleges? I feel disappointed as we didn’t intend to destroy the career of students,” Narayanasamy said.
A NEET aspirant from Madhya Pradesh went missing from Kerala after he reached the state to confirm his admission in a medical college.
Suredra Rajput, father of aspirant Akash Rajput, told HT that they had received a mail and a phone call notifying them about Akash’s admission in a college in Kerala’s Palakkad district.
“We reached Kerala on September 10. On the same day, my son went missing from the Thirsshur railway station”, he said
After searching for his son alone, Surendra approached the railway police, who sent a police official with him to the medical college in Palakkad. College authorities, however, said that his son had not got admission in their college and they had not sent any conformation mail or made a call. “My son’s phone is switched off since he went missing. All the details regarding mails and phone calls from the college are on his phone”, Surendra said. NEERAJ SANTOSHI AND SHRUTI TOMAR