CHANDIGARH: The Supreme Court has upheld the Punjab and Haryana high court docket verdict of reducing the institutional quota of the Sector-32 Government Medical College and Hospital (GMCH) for postgraduate lessons in medication and science (MD/MS) from 100 to 25%.
This implies that the GMCH should give 25% of its seats to eligible MBBS students of Chandigarh domicile and some other 25% to MBBS graduates from the school. The rest of the seats, that are in the central pool, remain untouched. The UT well being department had moved the apex court docket against the high court docket’s order of removing 100% quota in MD/MS for the GMCH graduates. “The arguments continued for over an hour,” a petitioner stated. “But the Supreme Court discovered no reason to overrule the high court docket.”
The college fills 61 of its 125 seats from the institutional quota, while it has handiest 50 MBBS students. The admission was via NEET (National Eligibility-cum-Entrance Test), followed by three counselling classes. The first counselling started on April 4 after a candidate, Dr Chahat Bhatia, was discovered ineligible to use from the state quota, since she had no longer graduated from the GMCH. She moved the high court docket and was allowed to take part in counselling underneath period in-between order. While the case was in the high court docket, one of the crucial students had moved the apex court docket on May 10. However, the Supreme Court did not believe their case and requested the high court docket to present a snappy decision.
However, when the high court docket passed a judgment on May 15, favouring 25% institutional quota and 25% state quota, the UT well being department, which regulates the GMCH, approached the Supreme Court. For 20 years, the school has followed the institutional quota rule of 61 seats for its graduates. The 11 students from other clinical colleges contested this of their petition in the high court docket. Despite repeated attempts, the GMCH director foremost may no longer be contacted.
This implies that the GMCH should give 25% of its seats to eligible MBBS students of Chandigarh domicile and some other 25% to MBBS graduates from the school. The rest of the seats, that are in the central pool, remain untouched. The UT well being department had moved the apex court docket against the high court docket’s order of removing 100% quota in MD/MS for the GMCH graduates. “The arguments continued for over an hour,” a petitioner stated. “But the Supreme Court discovered no reason to overrule the high court docket.”
The college fills 61 of its 125 seats from the institutional quota, while it has handiest 50 MBBS students. The admission was via NEET (National Eligibility-cum-Entrance Test), followed by three counselling classes. The first counselling started on April 4 after a candidate, Dr Chahat Bhatia, was discovered ineligible to use from the state quota, since she had no longer graduated from the GMCH. She moved the high court docket and was allowed to take part in counselling underneath period in-between order. While the case was in the high court docket, one of the crucial students had moved the apex court docket on May 10. However, the Supreme Court did not believe their case and requested the high court docket to present a snappy decision.
However, when the high court docket passed a judgment on May 15, favouring 25% institutional quota and 25% state quota, the UT well being department, which regulates the GMCH, approached the Supreme Court. For 20 years, the school has followed the institutional quota rule of 61 seats for its graduates. The 11 students from other clinical colleges contested this of their petition in the high court docket. Despite repeated attempts, the GMCH director foremost may no longer be contacted.
HC order of reducing GMCH institutional quota upheld
Reviewed by Kailash
on
May 26, 2018
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