Medical Council of India cancels 36 seats in Tamil Nadu private college
The Medical Council of India (MCI) has directed a private college in Tamil Nadu to cancel admissions of around 36 students who had allegedly not appeared for NEET exam last year.
By : migrator
Update: 2017-04-04 21:00 GMT
New Delhi
According to a senior MCI official, these are suspected to be backdoor admissions allegedly done after receiving capitation fees. The college was issued a discharge notice to cancel the admission of around 36 students as it was allegedly done in violation of norms, MCI secretary Dr Reena Nayyar said.
Similarly, in the line of fire are around 17 to 18 private colleges in Uttara Pradesh which have been issued notices asking them to cancel the admissions of over 400 students.
“The monitoring committee of MCI found that these institutes have admitted students who did not appear for the NEET exam despite the states opting for NEET,” said Dr Nayyar.
The Centre had last year given state governments the option to either conduct their own exams or opt for NEET to fill undergraduate seats.
The committee, Nayyar said, is keeping an eye on admissions in all the medical colleges across the country and is yet to find out the exact numbers of students who did not appear in the NEET but still got admission.
“Such admissions are illegal as the concerned states had opted for NEET and so they cannot bypass it,” she said. The Dental Council of India (DCI) is also examining the admissions in dental colleges across India.
“We have received complaints about illegal admissions in dental colleges in states like Rajasthan and Madhya Pradesh and we are scrutinising such admissions which were done ignoring NEET,” Dr AK Chandna, a member of DCI, said.
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