AIBE result will be available at allindiabarexamination.com in the fourth week of March.
In this ebook, we look at key aspects of the exam, like eligibility criteria, pattern, application process, and qualifying marks.
Download NowTeam Careers360 | March 22, 2021 | 12:45 PM IST
NEW DELHI: The apex law body, Bar Council of India, has announced that the AIBE XV (15) 2020 result will be declared in the fourth week of March 2021. Candidates will be able to check the AIBE result on the official website - allindiabarexamination.com. The exam was held on January 24, 2021, in offline mode.
Originally scheduled to be declared in the first week of March, the AIBE result has been postponed for the third time. Earlier, a notification released by the BCI on March 3, 2021, informed that AIBE XV (15) result will be declared in the third week of March. However, the latest notification has pushed the result date to the last week of March 2021.
Candidates will be able to check the result of AIBE at allindiabarexamination.com. To access the result, candidates will have to log in at the result portal using the registration ID and date of birth. AIBE result will have the qualifying status of the candidate. To qualify the examination, candidates will have to score 40% marks (35% in case of SC and ST category candidates).
The online registrations for the next session of AIBE will also end today. As per the revised schedule released by the council, the AIBE XVI (16) 2021 will be held on April 25, in offline mode. Unlike the previous sessions of the AIBE which were conducted in open-book format, the next session will not allow candidates to carry books and notes inside the exam hall. Candidates will however be allowed to carry the Bare Acts, the exact texts of particular legislation.
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In January, the compulsory requirement of AIBE to practice law was challenged in the Supreme Court. The petition has sought quashing of the AIBE 2010 Rules framed by the BCI alleging that it violates the Advocates Act and that it “illegally and arbitrarily” compels a lawyer to undergo AIBE even after his or her enrolment as an advocate. The matter is currently sub judice.
R. Radhika