'Discomfort with Muslim identity': J-K MP seeks Tamil Nadu CM's intervention in beard row
Vaishnavi Shukla | June 25, 2025 | 03:58 PM IST | 2 mins read
NEET SS 2025: The student was allotted a seat in the second round of counselling, but was taken aback after he was told to 'shave his beard' to study at the Kovai Medical Centre and Hospital (KMCH), Coimbatore.
The member of parliament, Lok Sabha and former Jammu and Kashmir state minister Aga Syed Ruhullah Mehdi has urged chief minister of Tamil Nadu MK Stalin to intervene, after a muslim doctor from J-K had to forgo his seat at Kovai Medical Centre and Hospital (KMCH) Coimbatore, after he was told he has to shave his beard while studying the speciality institute.
The J-K minister posted on the official X account: “A Kashmiri Muslim doctor was denied his place, not for lack of merit, but for his beard. This is deep-rooted discomfort with the visible Muslim identity. It tells us you can be Muslim, but only if we can’t see it. Urge @MKStalin to kindly intervene.”
While talking to Careers360, the student said he was allotted a seat at the KMCH’s nephrology department in the second round of NEET SS 2025 counselling .
NEET SS student taken aback by beard rule
NEET SS aspirant said he went to the institute to confirm his admission, and he was asked to sign a policy document stating facial hair rules, and was also threatened with admission denial if he fails to remove his beard. The student alleged a lack of religious freedom at the institute over the beard policy. The student said he considers his beard as an integral part of his religious faith and therefore, he didn’t take admission at the KMCH, and is seeking enrollment in the third round of NEET SS counselling 2025 .
Following this, the student had filed a complaint to the Post Graduate Medical Education Board (PGMEB) of the National Medical Commission (NMC), the medical education regulator, arguing the institute's facial hair policy is a violation of the constitutional principle of religious freedom.
Also read Shattered dreams, hostile environment: Muslim women students dropping out of college, says report
NBE directed KMCH to admit student
After the student’s complaint, the National Board of Examination in Medical Sciences (NBEMS) intervened and directed KMCH to admit the student, ‘subject to fulfilment of eligibility criteria.’ However, the student had asked the board to allow him to participate in the subsequent round of admissions, as he no longer wanted to study at the institution. He said: “I no longer want to study at the institute, as they may cause trouble for the next three years. There's no point in litigation either, as the chairman is a prominent person and I would get stressed.”
When Careers360 contacted the office of chairman Nalla G Palaniswami, they directed to contact KMCH’s medical director TP Kalaniti, who asserted that the student wasn’t denied admission due to the beard policy but non-payment of the admission fee. He said the student can still come and join the institute.
Furthermore, Kalaniti said the doctors taking admission at the hospital need to adhere to its policies, which don't include removing of beard, but rather want it to be trimmed. He added that the rule applies to students belonging to all religions.
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
]- Facing student protest, LHMC Delhi blames Rs 30 lakh mess dues for bad food, says AC hostel proposal with govt
- Education ministry plans Rs 14 crore grants for Prime Minister Research Chairs, Rs 4-6.5 crore fellowships
- AMU detains most of BA LLB batch for low attendance; no records or time given, allege students
- NIT Kurukshetra students demand elected council, quick re-exams, counselling for teachers
- IIM Fees vs Placements: Soaring cost, stagnant salaries, students in debt
- Delhi University plans study-abroad programme for UG students, scholarships for some
- Hostel Life: Bad food, dirty toilets, sky-high fees – the truth about higher education’s crumbling backbone
- No UGC framework, no scope of AI-free assignments; teachers rethink class assessment with viva voce
- Assam Women’s University: From handful of students to robots in village schools, AWU is just getting started
- Teacher Training: Deemed university on paper, NITTTRs lose ground as AICTE, MMTTCs muscle in on domain