NEET issue: Plea filed in SC to quash ordinance defering medical entrance exam by a year

Written By DNA Web Team | Updated: May 26, 2016, 09:41 PM IST

The petition is likely to be listed for hearing before a vacation bench in a day or two.

The petition is likely to be listed for hearing before a vacation bench in a day or two.

A plea was on Thursday filed in the Supreme Court seeking quashing of a recently-promulgated ordinance which allows states to continue with their separate entrance tests for MBBS and BDS courses, besides uniform medical entrance test NEET, for academic year 2016-17.

The petition, which is likely to be listed for hearing before a vacation bench in a day or two, has been filed by Indore-based doctor Anand Rai who also claims to be a whistle blower in the Vyapam scam.

Besides seeking quashing of the ordinance, which got Presidential assent on May 24, the plea has also sought a stay on the operation of the ordinance as an interim relief.

Referring to Centre's stand to support the single-window National Eligibility and Entrance Test (NEET) for admissions, the plea said the government has now taken a "complete U-turn" which shows "mala fides and ill intent towards the process of admission of students who shall suffer the most".

"The normal democratic legislative process involves the people's representatives in the two Houses openly enacting a law after full consideration and discussion, an ordinance seeks to circumvent this procedure for it is drafted secretly in government chambers and is promulgated without an open discussion and hence it is becomes even more pertinent that the ordinance making power is not invoked lightly but only when absolutely necessary to do so, and the situation cannot be otherwise met effectively," it said.

"... the present ordinance is a completely contradictory stand by the respondent (Centre) within a span of 4 (four) weeks, this is also a belated stage as the examination itself is to be scheduled within the next 8 (eight) weeks as per the Schedule given by the Respondent Union itself and the discriminating ordinance further creates confusion amongst students," it said.

The ordinance keeps state boards out of the ambit of uniform medical entrance examination, NEET, for present academic session.

The executive order is aimed at "partially" overturning a Supreme Court order which said the NEET will be held on July 24.