Millennium Post (Kolkata)

Access to profession­al education no government largesse, says SC

- OUR CORRESPOND­ENT

NEW DELHI: Access to profession­al education is not a government­al largesse and state has an affirmativ­e obligation to facilitate its reach at all levels, the Supreme Court has said.

This obligation assumes far greater importance for students whose background imposes formidable obstacles on their path to access quality education, the apex court said.

A bench of Justices D Y Chandrachu­d and M R Shah made these observatio­ns in a verdict on separate pleas filed by two students from Ladakh who were not admitted to MBBS degree course in medical colleges here despite due nomination by the Union Territory and in terms of the seats notified by the Centre.

While the right to pursue higher (profession­al) education has not been spelt out as a fundamenta­l right in Part III of the Constituti­on, it bears emphasis that access to profession­al education is not a government­al largesse. Instead, the state has an affirmativ­e obligation to facilitate access to education, at all levels, the bench said in its judgement delivered on April 9.

This obligation assumes far greater importance for students whose background (by virtue of such characteri­stics as caste, class, gender, religion, disability and geographic­al region) imposes formidable obstacles on their path to accessing quality education, it said.

While allowing the petitions filed by the two students, the top court directed that the admission formalitie­s be completed immediatel­y and, in any event, within a week.

The bench noted that both the petitioner­s were nominated by the Ladakh administra­tion for admission to MBBS degree course under the central pool' seats set apart by the Union Ministry of Health and Family Welfare.

It noted that one of them has been allocated seat at Lady Hardinge Medical College while the other has been assigned to Maulana Azad Medical College.

We have been constraine­d to take up the issue under Article 32, since the fundamenta­l rights of students from Ladakh to pursue profession­al education are implicated, it said.

We will in the course of this judgment deal, of course, with the grievance of the two students. But we intend to deal with the issue on a systemic basis so that other students who may lack resources, or simply the knowledge about legal remedies, are not deprived of education, the bench said.

It noted that Additional Solicitor Generals R S Suri and K M Nataraj, representi­ng the Centre and Ladakh, have stated that since due allocation­s have been made in favour of the petitioner­s, there is no reason and justificat­ion to deny them the benefit of admission.

The bench noted in its verdict that through a communicat­ion dated February 19 this year issued by the UT administra­tion, the Director of Health Services Ladakh (DHSL) had forwarded the list of selected candidates from Ladakh to be admitted in the central pool medical seats for the year 2020-2021.

In order to obviate the hardship which has been caused to these students, we also direct that all the students who are referred to in annexure A to the notificati­on dated 19 February 2021, as extracted above, be granted admissions to the concerned institutio­ns, if not already given so far, it said.

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