Friday, November 26, 2021

K’taka students among 10,000 NEET toppers double in 2 years


K’taka students among 10,000 NEET toppers double in 2 years

Delay Provided More Time For Prep: Experts

SruthySusan.Ullas@timesgroup.com

Bengaluru:  26.11.2021

The number of students from Karnataka among those securing the top 10,000 ranks in NEET-UG has more than doubled this year from pre-Covid times — 436 state students made it to the 1-10,000 bracket as compared to 351 in 2020 and 198 in 2019.

The number of those who secured more than 700 marks out of 720 in the National Eligibility cum Entrance Test (UG) this year was nearly four times more than that of 2020. As many as 11 students from Karnataka scored above 700 in 2021. As per the data shared by National Testing Agency, no student could get over 700 in 2019. In 2020, three students managed to make the cut.

In the top 50,000 ranks, there are 2,291 students from Karnataka, an increase of 279. In the first one lakh students, 5,364 are from Karnataka. The number was only 4,775 in 2020.

In the bracket of 650-699 marks, Karnataka has 212 students this year, as against 143 last year and 32 in 2019. In all, there are 629 students who scored above 99 percentile from Karnataka. The number of students in the 600-649 bracket remains more or less the same with only nine more entering it. In the 550-599 group, 42 more students secured the marks, taking the total to 1,328.

The trend in Karnataka is in sync with the national performance, where there is an 83% increase in the total number of candidates scoring more than 700. TOI had reported that state-wise candidates from Rajasthan and Uttar Pradesh continued their dominance in the exam.

Experts say the numbers are overwhelming. “There are two reasons why students are scoring well in NEET,” said Sridhar G, founder, Deeksha. “When NEET started, the physics and chemistry papers were on a par with JEE papers. But after the pandemic, the papers were made simple and faithful to NCERT,” he said.

“Additionally, with board exams getting cancelled students could focus completely on NEET. The delay in conducting the test also gave them more time to prepare,” he added.

Sridhar said this has also contributed to improvement in the relative performance of Karnataka students in comparison with other states. “This is because in Karnataka most students who take NEET are first-timers. Unlike states like Andhra Pradesh, Madhya Pradesh or Tamil Nadu, repeating is not a culture here, as the engineering options are very good. Repeaters have the advantage of not focusing on board exams, which the freshers also got this time. This provided a levelplaying field to both,” he said.

Mahesh Yadav, south India head of Allen career institute, said students have also adjusted well to the online mode. “Last year, they were not as comfortable with online classes as they were this year. They have been in regular touch with teachers now. With classes going online, students also saved time they spent on travel,” he said.

However, whether the cutoff for UG medical/dental admissions will rise will depend on the seat matrix, which is yet to be announced in Karnataka.

HC commutes death for 3 Shakti Mills rape convicts to life term


HC commutes death for 3 Shakti Mills rape convicts to life term

Swati.Deshpande@timesgroup.com

Mumbai:26.11.2021

Eight years after two shocking gang rape cases in the abandoned Shakti Mills premises in central Mumbai, the Bombay HC commuted the death sentence awarded to three convicts involved in both crimes to life imprisonment on Thursday.

The court upheld their conviction for gang rape and other offences and said the sentence shall mean “rigorous imprisonment for the remainder of their natural life” with no remission, including parole and furlough. It dismissed an appeal by another convict and upheld his life term.

“Women are the backbone of every nation and therefore, they deserve their due respect and honour. Honour and respect for women are the marks of a civilised society,’’ the HC said.

Convicts don’t deserve to assimilate in society: Court

A bench of Justices Sadhana Jadhav and P K Chavan said the crime was grave and the convicts “don’t deserve to assimilate in society”. “The statute has not prescribed mandatory death penalty. Although the offence is barbaric and heinous, it cannot be said… the accused deserve only death penalty,” said the HC, adding they “deserve imprisonment for life to repent the offence committed by them as death puts an end to the concept of repentance”.

Vijay Jadhav, 19 at the time of the crime, Mohammad Qasim Shaikh (20) and Mohammed Salim Ansari (27) had been sent to death row in April 2014 by the trial court in a case of gangrape of a photojournalist, then 22, on August 22, 2013. Besides the three, one person was sentenced to life and a minor accused was penalised under the juvenile justice board. The accused did not appeal the death penalty.

The three had got the death sentence as they were also convicted in another gangrape of a 19-year-old telephone operator on July 31, 2013, on the same premises at Mahalaxmi.

Their court-appointed counsel Yug Chaudhry cited several irregularities in the trial court proceedings in awarding them death sentence under section 376E of the IPC, a stringent law for repeat offenders, saying the charge was not invoked as per law. But special public prosecutor Deepak Salvi argued that the law permits death sentence for second conviction and the “sequence and time of the offence is immaterial”.

On March 20, 2014, the sessions judge had first held the three common accused guilty for the gangrape of the telephone operator and about 30 minutes later, pronounced a guilty verdict in the case of the photojournalist too. In this gap, the state had made a plea to invoke section 376E. The court, therefore, handed the death sentence.

The HC bench held that it was not a case of a previous conviction “since both the sessions cases were being tried simultaneously and the conviction in both was on the same day without giving an opportunity to the accused to place before the court the mitigating circumstances”.

It added: “In a case like the present one, the court cannot ignore the fact that this incident had shocked the conscience of the society and there was public outcry.” But the court cannot punish based on public outcry alone, it is a court’s duty to consider the case “dispassionately’’ and it cannot ignore legal procedures. “A sentence of death is irrevocable and therefore, the basic principle in sentencing policy would be life imprisonment as a rule and death penalty as an exception,” the court added.

On Thursday, in a separate judgment, the high court dismissed an appeal and upheld the life sentence of Mohd Ashfaq Shaikh, 25, for the July 31 gangrape.

In the death sentence confirmation hearing, the HC said “there is no doubt that the incident as narrated by the survivor on August 22, 2013, had occurred in the backdrop and in the manner in which it was narrated. The courage of the survivor needs to be appreciated’.


The statute has not prescribed mandatory death penalty. Although the offence is barbaric and heinous, it cannot be said the accused deserve only death penalty... they deserve imprisonment for life to repent the offence committed by them as death puts an end to the concept of repentance

—BOMBAY HC

A sentence of death is irrevocable and therefore, the basic principle in sentencing policy would be life imprisonment as a rule and death penalty as an exception

Court

[NEET- AIQ] Our Only Concern Is That The More We Push The Admissions Back, The More The Delay In The Term: Supreme Court


[NEET- AIQ] Our Only Concern Is That The More We Push The Admissions Back, The More The Delay In The Term: Supreme Court


25 Nov 2021 7:51 PM


"I have instructions to say that the government has decided to revisit the (EWS) criteria and we will formulate a committee and we would decide within four weeks. Till then, whatever assurance we have given to your lordships continues. Counselling would wait for four more weeks", SG Tushar Mehta told the Supreme Court on Thursday.

The bench of Justices D. Y. Chandrachud, Surya Kant and Vikram Nath was hearing a batch of petitions filed by NEET aspirants challenging the decision of the Central Government to introduce 27% OBC and 10% EWS reservation in the NEET-AIQ.

Justice Chandrachud observed, "That is a very good thing. Let it be done scientifically. You can revisit the criteria. We are not coming in the way at all. But our only concern is that the more we push the admissions back, the more the delay in the term. That is something you have to take a policy decision on."

"Would your lordships want us to consider whether to continue with the present criteria in this year?," asked the SG.

"Not the present criteria because then we have to hear this matter. If you can, for the EWS, since this process is going on (unclear)...in this willy-nilly, the term gets pushed back (unclear)", said Justice Chandrachud.

"I will take instructions", said the SG.

Justice Chandrachud noted, "What happens is that we are at the end of November. Suppose you complete it by the end of December and then implementation etc and then the terms would begin only sometime in February-March. Two months, the students are losing the time. This is something you may want to consider."

The SG then said, "Then the other option would be that for the present Academic year, we go with this criteria which is not per se arbitrary, although it may not have been planned..."

"That is their challenge. Now you have also felt the need to do it. We don't want to say anything more right now. We don't want to give our mind at all right now. We have to hear both sides. We are seized of this matter now. You may apply the EWS criteria itself from next year so that the student can get admissions...", remarked Justice Chandrachud.

"Deferring the constitutional amendment should be the last thing...", advanced the SG.

"That is only an enabling provision", said Justice Chandrachud.

"But that is brought into the operation. The government intends to enforce it", submitted the SG.

Justice Surya Kant noted, "EWS is a very pragmatic and progressive kind of reservation for which the State must be credited. The only issue is as to how to adjust it, whether horizontal or vertical.."

Senior Advocate Arvind Datar, for the petitioner, advanced, "The people getting more than 70,000 Rs. per month, can they be called EWS? Eight lakh limit is the question."

Justice Surya Kant said, "For that, they can work out."

"That is what we are doing", assured the SG.

"You were supposed to do it before Diwali", submitted Mr. Datar

Justice Chandrachud said, "If you push them too much, too fast, then there would be another set of petitions challenging the arbitrariness"

"We are closing on 17. 16 is the last working day. They can atleast report to the court by the 12 so that in the miscellaneous week we can have some idea whether to go on with the counselling or not go on with counselling", told Mr. Datar.

Justice Chandrachud reflected, "If they have to do it, let them do it in a proper way. We don't want to push them in a situation where they do something in an improper way- you know, all the problems that we have noticed in our order. Four weeks is not unreasonably long. I am only worried that medical admissions and the medical year is being postponed."

"Your Lordships may consider keeping in mind that while other appointments may come, but where it has started, it may not come to a standstill...", submitted the SG.

"We will record your statement and we will say that they want four weeks and we will place it on the reopening", said Justice Chandrachud.

Justice Surya Kant noted, "There is a challenge to EWS/OBC. There might be candidates among the SC/ST also. Would you want to make space in the reserved category?"

"That would be a forward-looking way. I will put it to the government", responded the SG.

Proceeding to dictate the order, the bench recorded, "SG Tushar Mehta, for the Union of India, with ASG K. M. Natarj, states that the Union of India has taken a considered decision to revisit the criteria for determining the economically weaker sections in terms of the provisions of the Explanation to Article 15 of the Constitution, inserted by the 103rd Amendment Act 2019. The SG states that a period of four weeks would be required for this exercise, and pending its conclusion, the date for counselling shall stand postponed. In the circumstances, the assurance which was earlier placed on record of this court would continue. Accordingly, we direct that further hearing be listed on January 6, 2022."

The Centre had on October 25 assured the Supreme Court that the counselling for NEET-PG 2021 shall not commence until the Court decides the validity of the Centre's decision to introduce OBC and EWS reservation in All India Quota.

The assurance came when senior advocate Arvind Datar, who appears for NEET aspirants in the batch of petitions challenging the decision of the Central Government to introduce 27% OBC and 10% EWS reservation in the NEET-AIQ, mentioned before the bench headed by Justice D. Y. Chandrachud that in terms of an official communication from the Director General of Health Services that in respect of students participating in NEET-PG, the counselling is to commence from October 25, 2021.

Clarifying this, ASG K. M. Nataraj assured, "Mr. Datar has got the communication which was sent only to the colleges for the purpose of verification of seats. There is one more clarificatory notification which has been issued today. Otherwise, counselling will not begin unless the issue has been dealt with by the court somehow."

"We will take your word for it then, so long as the students are not counselled. We will take your word that counselling is not starting till we decide one way or the other. Students will be in a serious problem otherwise...", observed Justice Chandrachud.

"Certainly, Your Lordships. And if there is any problem at all in the future, Mr. Datar can contact me directly", asserted the ASG.

Justice Chandrachud also told Mr. Datar that he may feel free to approach the ASG in case of any issue in this regard.

The Central Government had to face tough questions from the Supreme Court on October 21 over its decision to adopt the criteria of annual income of Rupees 8 lakhs for determining the eligibility for Economic Weaker Sections(EWS) reservation in the NEET-All India Quota.

The bench of Justices D. Y. Chandrachud, Justice Vikram Nath and Justice BV Nagarathna expressed unhappiness at the Centre not filing an affidavit on the issue, although the Court had raised several doubts about the EWS criteria on the previous hearing date (October 7).

The bench sought to know what was the exercise undertaken by the Centre for adopting this criteria. Pointing out that Rs 8 lakh was the criteria for creamy layer for OBC reservation, the bench asked how the same criteria can be adopted for OBC and EWS categories, when the latter has no social and educational backwardness.

"You must have some demographic or sociological or socio-economic data. You just cannot pull out 8 lakh from thin air...you are making unequals equals by applying the Rs 8 lakh limit", Justice Chandrachud told Additional Solicitor General KM Nataraj.

"In OBC, people who are below 8 lakh, they suffer from social & educational backwardness. Under the constitutional scheme, EWS are not socially & educationally backward", Justice Chandrachud pointed out.

While the bench agreed that the EWS criteria was ultimately a policy matter, it added that the Court is entitled to know the reasons adopted for arriving at a policy decision to determine its constitutionality.

The bench at one point even warned that it will stay the EWS notification.

"Please show us something. You had 2 weeks to file an affidavit. We can stay the notification & in the meanwhile you do something", Justice Chandrachud said.

However, the ASG pleaded to not stay the notification and undertook to file the affidavit at the earliest. The ASG submitted that he needed to get instructions from the Ministry of Social Welfare and the Department of Personnel and Training, which were added as respondents later. The petitions were filed only with the Ministry of Health and Family Welfare as the respondent. The ASG submitted that the draft of the affidavit was ready and will be filed within 2-3 days.

The bench passed an order formulating certain issues on which it sought specific responses from the Centre. The issues are :

1. Whether the Centre undertook any exercise before arriving at the criteria to determine EWS.

2. If the answer is affirmative, is the criteria based on Sinho commission report. If so, place the report on record.

3. The income limit for determining creamy layer in OBC and EWS is the same, that is Rs 8 lakhs annual income. In the OBC category, the economically advanced category is excluded as social backwardness diminishes. In such a scenario, whether it would be arbitrary to provide similar income limit for EWS and OBC, as EWS has no concept of social and economic backwardness.

4. Whether difference in rural and urban purchasing power has been accounted for while deriving this limit.

5. On what basis asset exception has been arrived at and has any exercise been undertaken for the same.

6. Reason why residential flat criteria doesn't differentiate b/w metropolitan and non-metropolitan area.

The bench observed in the order that the Court must be apprised of on what basis has the EWS income criterion been arrived at.

"We make it clear that we are not entering area of policy but need the disclosure for adhering to constitutional principles", the bench clarified in its order.

The bench also pointed out in its order that as per the explanations to Articles 15(6) and 16(6), the State Governments notify the criteria for EWS.
The explanation included in 103rd Constitution amendment, under Articles 15 & 16 says that the economically weaker sections "shall be such as may be notified by the State from time to time on the basis of family income and other indicators of economic disadvantage". In this backdrop, the bench asked the basis for the Centre notifying the EWS criteria on a uniform basis across the country.

[NEET- AIQ] Our Only Concern Is That The More We Push The Admissions Back, The More The Delay In The Term: Supreme Court

[NEET- AIQ] Our Only Concern Is That The More We Push The Admissions Back, The More The Delay In The Term: Supreme Court

Religious conversion can’t undo caste status, says HC


Religious conversion can’t undo caste status, says HC

Refuses Inter-caste Certificate To Dalit Man

Sureshkumar.k@timesgroup.com

Chennai: 26.11.2021

Conversion from one religion to another religion will not change the caste of a person which he belongs to, Madras high court has ruled, nixing a bid by a Dalit man, who embraced Christianity, to obtain an inter-caste marriage certificate to get priority in government jobs. Dalit-converts are treated as backward community (BC) members and not as SCs, as per law.

In Tamil Nadu, weddings involving a forward caste member with SC/ST, or a wedding between a BC member and an SC/ST are treated as inter-caste weddings entailing priority in government jobs.

Justice S M Subramaniam, reiterating that merely because of conversion and his consequent categorisation as a BC member, a Dalit cannot claim his marriage to another Dalit as an inter-caste marriage, said: “The petitioner admittedly belongs to Christian Adi-Dravidar community and by virtue of conversion to Christianity he was issued with the Backward Class certificate. However, by birth, the petitioner belongs to 'Adi-Dravidar' community and change of religion will not change the community. The classification of Scheduled Caste, Scheduled Tribes, Most Backward Classes, Backward Classes and Other castes will not change the caste.”

It was the case of S Paul Raj that he belonged to Christian Adi-Dravida possessing a Backward Class certificate. He married G Amutha, who belongs to Hindu Arunthathiyar community. Postmmarriage, Paul Raj claimed that it was an inter-caste marriage since he was now a BC member and not a Dalit. A BC member’s marriage with an SC member shall be treated as an inter-caste marriage, with all attendant benefits, he claimed. He relied on a December 28, 1976 government order which says: "Where one of the spouses belongs to SC/ ST, then inter-caste marriage certificate has to be issued in favour of the petitioner”.

He moved the high court after the Salem district officials rejected his contention, pointing out that he himself hailed from a Dalit community and that his conversion will not undo his caste status.

Upholding the finding, Justice Subramaniam said: “In the event of a converted person claiming inter-caste marriage certificate, it would pave way for the citizen to abuse the benefit granted under the inter-caste marriage quota. The repercussion will be large and, therefore, the inter-caste marriage certificate has to be issued only if any one of the spouses belongs to the Scheduled Caste and other spouse belongs to the other caste, but not otherwise.”

It was the case of S Paul Raj that he belonged to Christian Adi-Dravida possessing a BC certificate. Postmarriage, he claimed that it was an inter-caste marriage since he was now a BC member and not a Dalit.

Upset at being ‘linked to girl’s suicide’, teacher ends life


Upset at being ‘linked to girl’s suicide’, teacher ends life

TIMES NEWS NETWORK

Trichy:26.11.2021

A 44-year-old private school teacher in Karur hanged himself to death on Wednesday evening after leaving a note blaming his extreme act on students who allegedly linked him to the suicide of a 17-year-old girl student a few days ago.

A Saravanan, a maths teacher, took permission from the school and went to his father-in-law’s house at Sengattupatti in Trichy where he hanged himself in a room in the upstairs. He is survived by his wife and two sons. The girl, who was a student of the same school, had ended her life at her house on November 19 after leaving a suicide note blaming sexual harassment for her action though she did not name anyone. The only daughter of her widowed mother, she was also attending NEET coaching at the school. Stating that she should be the last victim of sexual harassment, she said she was afraid of revealing the identity of the perpetrators of the crime. Vengamedu police which booked a case of suspicious death could not get any clue about her allegations.

Police said Saravanan was not taking classes for the girl as she was in another section. However, some students made insulting comments against him, stated Saravanan in his suicide note. A facebook post while regretting his action, praised Saravanan’s dedication to teaching saying several students had benefited from it. Thuraiyur police brought Saravanna’s body to the government hospital for postmortem and are investigating.

A Saravanan took permission from the school and went to his father-in-law’s house in Trichy where he died by suicide

66 fully vaccinated Dharwad medicos test +ve for Covid


66 fully vaccinated Dharwad medicos test +ve for Covid

Basavaraj.Kattimani@timesgroup.com

Hubballi:26.11.2021

Dharwad district which was reporting daily fresh Covid cases in lower single digits for three months saw a frightening surge in infections on Thursday with 66 fully vaccinated students of a medical college testing positive for coronavirus in the past 48 hours.

The infected students of SDM College of Medical Sciences, Sattur, Dharwad, have been isolated and quarantined in the college hostel. The two hostels on the campus where they were staying have been barricaded. Offline classes have been suspended till further notice.

Sources said this is a first major Covid cluster outbreak after colleges and schools were reopened n Karnataka for in-class learning a couple of months ago.

Principal Dr Ratnamala Desai told TOI that two students developed fever and were admitted to hospital after attending a college event on November17. On Monday, they tested positive for Covid. “Immediately, we tested nearly 300 students who participated in the event and 64 of them tested positive on Wednesday, taking the total to 66.”

Most of the infected students are from the third year.

(Additional inputs by Gururaj Jamkhandi)

Full report on www.toi.in

ADB approves $1.5 billion loan to India for purchase of Covid-19 vaccines
New Delhi:

The Asian Development Bank (ADB) on Thursday approved a $1.5 billion loan to help India purchase safe and effective vaccines against Covid-19.

The Asian Infrastructure Investment Bank is expected to cofinance an additional $500 million for the project, the ADB said. The loans will fund at least 667 million Covid-19 vaccine doses for an estimated 317 million people. It will support India’s National Deployment and Vaccination Plan which aims to fully vaccinate 944.7 million people aged 18 years old and above, accounting for 68.9% of the population. Priority groups include healthcare and frontline workers, senior citizens, and those aged 45–59 years with comorbidities. TNN

NEWS TODAY 28.01.2026