Court discards Medical Entrance Test of 11 Kerala Colleges
18 August 2011

The judgment has affected more than 500 students who paid hefty capitation fees for admissions to these colleges


The Kerala High Court has declared that the entrance examination conducted by the state’s 11 private medical colleges as null and void and has asked the state government to take over all the seats for making fresh admissions.

The judgment has hit more than 500 students who had paid hefty capitation fees for admissions to these colleges.

Justice Antony Dominic delivered the judgment after a student filed a petition alleging that the private college managements flouted the rules.

The court also came down heavily on the government for its failure to perform the duty of a watchdog.

The judge described the government's role as shameful, after the government said that the entrance examination was conducted in a fair manner.

According to the rules, every year, 50 per cent of the seats could be filled up by the private managements after conducting their own entrance examination.

A private TV channel recently aired a sting operation showing footage related to admissions to the private college seats. The sting hinted that the admissions were manipulated by college managements by allegedly telling aspirants to pay more than Rs 3 million each as capitation fees. Once the fee was paid, the aspirants sailed through the entrance examination.

Fazal Gafoor, head of an association of private medical colleges, said that they were expecting this outcome.

"Now we are left with no other option but to go in for an appeal against the verdict that has come out today," said Gafoor.


Source: igovernment




Readers Feedback

Comments

There is no comment for this story, please post a comment.

Post new comment

The content of this field is kept private and will not be shown publicly.
Sign up for your free email EDU newsletter
Enter your email
YOUR OPINION
Will The Liberal Arts Model Redefine Our Educational Institutions?
Poll result:

Yes   (76%)
 
No   (17%)
 
Can't Tell   (7%)