Rule stopping OCI candidates to apply for general seats applicable only from notification date: Supreme Court
Vagisha Kaushik | February 6, 2023 | 05:35 PM IST | 2 mins read
The Supreme Court held that Centre’s decision to stop OCI candidates from applying in general category for admissions will be applicable from March 4, 2021 only.
NEW DELHI : The Supreme Court said that the government's decision restraining the Overseas Citizens of India (OCI) to apply for general category seats in Indian entrance tests such as National Eligibility Entrance Test (NEET), Joint Entrance Examination (JEE) Main and JEE Advanced will apply prospectively from the date of the notification issued on the matter which is March 4, 2021. The top court was delivering the judgment on a batch of petitions filed by OCI candidates against the 2021 notification issued by the Ministry of Home Affairs to treat them at par with Non-Resident Indians (NRIs) for admission.
Justices A S Bopanna and CT Ravikumar held, “Though the impugned notification dated March 4, 2021 is based on a policy and in the exercise of the statutory power of a sovereign state, the provisions as contained therein shall apply prospectively only to persons who are born in a foreign country subsequent to March 4, 2021, that is, the date of notification and who seek for a registration as OCI cardholder from that date…”
Also Read | India has 1.17 lakh single-teacher government schools: Education Ministry
The top court allowed all the petitioners to enjoy rights and privileges conferred on them before the publication of the notification. SC observed that the notification lacked application of mind and resulted in deprivation of rights of those candidates who secured OCI cards before March 4, 2021.
The apex court further observed that the OCI candidates undertook their entire education or at least high school onwards from India and thus cannot be turned back to their birthplace to secure higher education as they would not be able to compete with the students in that country.
Also Read | New UGC guidelines have helped streamline foreign partnerships for universities
The Centre had told the court that the reason behind putting out the notification was to save seats for the Indian students. However, SC said that there is no material on the actual exercise that Centre undertook to arrive at the decision that OCI candidates are depriving Indian students of admissions.
Notably, in 2021, the Supreme Court had permitted all eligible OCI candidates to participate in general category NEET counselling for undergraduate and postgraduate medical courses for the academic year 2021-22 only.
Follow us for the latest education news on colleges and universities, admission, courses, exams, research, education policies, study abroad and more..
To get in touch, write to us at news@careers360.com.
Next Story
]Featured News
]- ‘Before NEP made it policy, Bombay Cambridge School made it practice’
- ‘Hatred’ for Dalits: JNUSU ex-president moves National Commission for Scheduled Castes against JNU VC
- AI is reshaping classrooms, but human mentorship and thoughtful integration hold the key
- From Nipun Bharat to CM Composite School, UP bets big on learning overhaul, basic education secretary explains
- How randomised controlled trials hollowed out Indian education
- Reels, Gaming, Burnout: How schools, parents are drawing India’s smartphone generation back to books, sports
- Galgotias University: 2,297 patents filed, just 1% granted; with 63%, IITs far ahead of private institutes
- Samajwadi Party calls Galgotias University’s robot dog display ‘mockery of UP’, says ‘cancel recognition’
- CBSE: APAAR ID must for LOC registration from 2026-27 session; two-level Class 10 exams from 2028
- Less bias, more risk? CBSE on-screen marking system leaves Class 12 students, teachers cautious but optimistic