Open NEET training centres for benefit of poor, rural students in Tamil Nadu: BJP MLA
Press Trust of India | February 4, 2022 | 04:05 PM IST | 2 mins read
Tamil Nadu Governor RN Ravi returned the NEET exemption bill to the state government yesterday.
Predict your NEET 2026 rank instantly! Enter your expected score and get an estimated AIR, percentile, and college admission chances with NEET 2026 Rank Predictor.
Try NowCoimbatore: With Governor RN Ravi returning the bill seeking exemption for Tamil Nadu from NEET, the ruling DMK government should immediately open training centres for the benefit of rural students to clear the medical entrance examination, BJP MLA and All India Mahila Morcha President Vanathi Srinivasan said on Friday.
New: RE-NEET 2026 Official Provisional Answer Key | Solution (All Codes)
RE-NEET 2026: Rank Predictor | College Predictor | Marks vs Rank
Also See: Safe Score for AIIMS Delhi | Re-NEET Epected Cutoff | MBBS Seats in India
Welcoming the decision taken by the governor , Srinivasan in a statement said NEET itself was introduced following a Supreme Court verdict during the UPA government at the Centre in which the DMK was a constituent. Stating that NEET will help to put an end to the capitation fee and exorbitant fees collected by private colleges run by politicians and rich people for seats, she said this was the reason for the medical entrance exam being opposed in Tamil Nadu, which has a large number of private medical colleges.
Also read | Scandal, paper leak, corruption: Rajya Sabha member on scrapping NEET in Tamil Nadu
The necessity of a separate seat reservation policy was suggested by then Union Health Minister J P Nadda to the Tamil Nadu government for the benefit of rural and government school students, she said, adding that the AIADMK government at the time immediately acted on it and reserved 7.5 per cent for the purpose.
The previous dispensation took a decision in 2020 to reserve 7.5 per cent of undergraduate medical seats for government school students clearing the NEET exam. Earlier, only 20 to 30 students from government schools could take pursue medical courses but around 600 students are now taking admissions after introduction of the reservation policy without affecting social justice, the Coimbatore South MLA said.
The ones who were "really affected" by NEET were private medical colleges, particularly in Namakkal, Salem and Erode districts and that was why BJP opposed the NEET exemption bill when it was tabled in the state assembly, the MLA said. Without standing behind private colleges, the state government should accept the bill having been returned and open training centres for the benefit of rural and poor students, the BJP leader said.
Also read | ICSE, ISC semester 1 results on February 7; Recheck window open till February 10 at cisce.org
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
]- SCERT, DIET vacancies as high as 50% in many states; Haryana, MP, Maharashtra top list, reveals PAB meet
- SNU Chennai VC: Mechanical, civil, chemical engineering still deliver; demand for BTech cybersecurity on rise
- Delhi University’s MAMC, UCMS draw NEET toppers but offer dead computers, lagging wi-fi, and delayed degrees
- ‘Bureaucratic hurdle’: KCET rank list not updated after CBSE re-evaluation, affects admission, says student
- How Bihar Engineering University is powering through violence, floods, placement woes
- UK, US opportunities shrink but 1.2 lakh Indian MBBS still lost to them; Australia, Germany, Middle East gain
- Maharashtra’s new Class 6 social science textbook drops caste system, meat diet; paints rosy Vedic past
- IIIT Allahabad fines B.Techs who accept campus placement offers and then take other jobs, allege students
- Tamil Nadu: Chennai LKG fees highest in state; fee details of thousands of TN private schools public
- GMR Aero Technic’s aviation course produces professionals airlines can deploy from day one: President