PM Modi to inaugurate 11 new medical colleges in Tamil Nadu on January 12
Press Trust of India | January 10, 2022 | 07:08 PM IST | 2 mins read
Prime Minister Narendra Modi will inaugurate 11 new government medical colleges across Tamil Nadu and the new campus of Central Institute of Classical Tamil in Chennai.
NEW DELHI: Prime Minister Narendra Modi will inaugurate 11 new government medical colleges across Tamil Nadu and the new campus of Central Institute of Classical Tamil in Chennai on Wednesday via video conferencing, his office said. The new medical colleges are being established at an estimated cost of about Rs 4,000 crore, of which around Rs 2,145 crore has been provided by the Union government and the rest by the Tamil Nadu government, the Prime Minister's Office said in a statement.
Prime Minister Modi will inaugurate 11 new government medical colleges across Tamil Nadu and the new campus of Central Institute of Classical Tamil in Chennai at 4 PM on January 12 via video conferencing, it said. The districts where the new medical colleges are being established are Virudhunagar, Namakkal, Nilgiris, Tiruppur, Thiruvallur, Nagapattinam, Dindigul, Kallakurichi, Ariyalur, Ramanathapuram and Krishnagiri.
Also Read | Budget 2022: 5 pre-budget wishes of edtech firms for edtech sector
Establishment of these medical colleges is in line with the prime minister's constant endeavour to promote affordable medical education and improve health infrastructure in all parts of the country, the PMO said. The new medical colleges, with a cumulative capacity of 1,450 seats, are being established under the centrally-sponsored scheme of 'Establishing of New Medical Colleges attached with existing district/referral hospital'. Under the scheme, medical colleges are established in districts, which do not have either a government or private medical college, the statement said.
New medical colleges in Tamil Nadu
The establishment of a new campus of Central Institute of Classical Tamil (CICT) in Chennai is in line with the prime minister's vision to protect and preserve Indian heritage and promote classical languages, the PMO said. The new campus is fully funded by the Union government and is built at a cost of Rs 24 crore, it said. CICT, which was operating from a rented building so far, will now function from a new three-storey campus. The new campus is equipped with a spacious library, an e-library, seminar halls and a multimedia hall, the statement said.
Also Read | NEET PG 2021 Counselling: MCC notifies changes in counselling scheme
An autonomous organisation under the Union Ministry of Education, CICT is contributing to the promotion of classical Tamil by doing research activities so as to establish the ancientness and uniqueness of Tamil language, it said. The institute library has a rich collection of over 45,000 ancient Tamil books. To promote classical Tamil and support its students, the institute indulges in academic activities like holding seminars and training programmes, granting fellowship, etc., the statement said.
It also aims to translate and publish 'Thirukkural' in various Indian as well as 100 foreign languages. The new campus will provide an efficient working environment for the institute in its pursuit of promoting classical Tamil across the world, the statement said.
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.
Quick Watch
]Next Story
]Featured News
]- NMC drafts rules to sideline states on medical college approvals, gets tougher on infrastructure norms
- From IIT Madras to Kharagpur: Why top engineering colleges are now teaching biomedical sciences
- VBSA Bill: Joint Parliamentary Committee to finalise, adopt draft report on July 17
- NCAHP push for uniform allied healthcare education slowed by missing state councils, implementation gaps
- Maharashtra hostels for SC, ST students run without wardens, overcrowded; some ‘bogus’: CAG report
- 'Diagnosed with SLD by accident’: Adults fighting ADHD, dyslexia, dyscalculia have neither measure nor relief
- Over 70% Indians in Germany find right job, fit into workforce, but language a major hurdle: Study
- AISHE Report: SC, ST faculty at just 10% and 3%, women drop from 44% at entry level to 27% at professor rank
- Has DST scrapped INSPIRE-SHE scholarship? No notice, list, or clarity leaves students wondering
- In National Pharmacy Commission Bill, exit test after B.Pharm, board for AYUSH and reduced state role