NEET PG 2022: Supreme Court seeks Centre's response to reservation policy allegedly not followed in exam
Centre asked to file response against plea alleging general candidates being allotted seats under under quota meant for weaker sections in NEET PG.
Check your admission chances in Govt and Private Medical colleges by using NEET PG 2024 College Predictor.
Try NowPress Trust of India | November 15, 2022 | 08:54 PM IST
NEW DELHI: The Supreme Court on Tuesday asked the Centre to file its response to a plea which alleged reserved category meritorious candidates, who have qualified for general seats in the National Eligibility cum Entrance Test (NEET PG 2022) examination, were being allotted seats under quota meant for the weaker sections.
Latest: NEET PG 2024 College Predictor
New: All about NEET PG
Don't miss: NEET PG One on One Counselling and Admission Guidance
A bench of Chief Justice DY Chandrachud and Justices Hima Kohli and JB Pardiwala asked Additional Solicitor General Aishwarya Bhati, appearing for the Centre, to file an affidavit about the exact procedure being followed in the examination. Advocate Prashant Bhushan, appearing for petitioner Pankaj Kumar Mandal and others, said candidates who applied in the reserved category but scored high marks making them eligible for admission in the general category, were still being allotted quota seats in violation of the apex court's verdicts in the past.
Also Read | NEET PG Counselling 2022: Mop-up round choice filling, locking deadline extended to November 16
Responding to Bhushan's contention, Bhati said, "We are bound by the reservation policy which has been indicated in the NEET-PG examination brochure and this policy is not for only 50 seats but it is roster wise and speciality wise. This is the law which is being followed."
Bhushan said a lot of students are affected by the policy adopted in NEET-PG-2022 examination. The counselling process, he said, was underway. The bench then asked Bhati to file an affidavit about the procedure adopted for admission and listed the matter for further hearing on November 21.
The plea filed by Mandal and others contended it is a settled position of law that reserved category candidates who get high qualifying marks for unreserved seats should be admitted against the general and not reserved category seats.
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
]- ‘Academic apartheid’: Non-doctors denounce NMCs’ new rules for medical faculty recruitment
- New UGC regulations may create rubber-stamp VCs, conflict with states: JNU professor
- Why NMC bid to expand medical faculty pool is drawing fire from both doctors, non-medical postgraduates
- Data Science, Maritime and Property Law: Top LLB, LLM colleges launch courses in niche frontiers
- Music, arts and Harry Potter: How top law colleges are using films and fiction to teach legal concepts
- Manipal Law School director: ‘Our LLM courses focus on data privacy, IT laws and other emerging areas’
- Litigation to corporate law: A first-generation lawyer's journey from burnout to breakthrough
- AI and Law: Top law schools blend artificial intelligence into curriculum, with research and global insights
- GLC Mumbai: Asia’s oldest law college struggles with falling academic standards, fund crunch
- NEET PG 2024 Counselling: DNB seats ‘withdrawn’ after being allotted; candidates may lose a year