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Tuesday, July 7, 2026
TN may lose 650 MBBS seats, admissions to get tougher, fees set to soar. State health officials say deemed university status granted despite no NOCs
TN may lose 650 MBBS seats, admissions to get tougher, fees set to soar
Pushpa.Narayan@timesofindia.com 07.07.2026
Chennai : 07.07.2026
Getting admitted in acollege in Tamil Nadu will be harder and more expensive this academic year. At least 650 MBBS seats will be removed from the state’s seat matrix in 2026, as three colleges have been conferred deemed university status. Officials in the health department said the number could double, as at least three more colleges have told the state they are expecting University Grants Commission’s approval soon.
Admissions to all self-financing medical colleges affiliated to Tamil Nadu Dr MGR Medical University and state private universities are done by the state selection committee. The National Medical Commission website now lists St Peter’s Medical College (250 seats) and two other institutions — Dhanalakshmi Srinivasan Institute of Medical Sciences and Srinivasan Medical College (400 seats) — as deemed universities.
State health officials say deemed university status granted despite no NOCs
A senior health official said, “Until now, these institutions shared 50-65% of seats with the state for admission under govt quota, including 7.5% for govt school students. At least 350 govt quota seats, including 25 under the 7.5% quota, will be a big loss.”
If three more colleges are granted deemed university status, the number will cross 700 govt quota seats and 50 seats under the 7.5% quota. Karpaga Vinayaga Institute of Medical Sciences and Research Centre has announced deemed status on its website, while NMC’s records still list it as affiliated to TN Dr MGR Medical University.
Admission to MBBS seats in deemed universities is done by the central Medical Counselling Committee (MCC), for students across the country. Besides competing with students nationwide, aspirants will have to pay at least ₹20 lakh a year as tuition fees. Under the existing fee structure, annual tuition at private colleges has been fixed by a panel at ₹4.35 lakh to ₹5.40 lakh for govtquota seats in self-financing colleges and state private universities, and ₹15 lakh to ₹16.20 lakh for managementquota seats.
Fees for students from govt colleges is paid by the govt. Centre has not fixed a tuition fee for deemed universities, which charge anywhere between ₹20 lakh and ₹35 lakh a year. State health officials said they would write to Centre stating that deemed university status has been granted to affiliated colleges despite objections from the state university.
Ever since the TN Dr MGR Medical University vice-chancellor stepped down in May, the university has been managed by a five-member committee. “No objection certificate from the university is mandatory to get deemed university status. We have not issued it to anyone,” said Dr S Pushkala, member of the university’s administration committee.
Officials from St Peter Institute of Higher Education and Research said the status came after a legal battle. The institution moved Delhi high court against UGC and TN Dr MGR Medical University after its bid to convert its Hosur medical college into an off-campus centre was blocked. In 2025, HC ruled in the institution’s favour on a narrow procedural ground — the university’s refusal letter, though dated within the mandatory 60-day window, was communicated to the college six days after the deadline lapsed.
HC held the university’s consent was deemed granted by default, and quashed UGC’s rejection and the university’s NOC refusal. “We have appealed against this order. We don’t know how other colleges got deemed university status,” said Dr Pushkala.
The state health department said it applied to NMC for increase in 50 seats each in govt medical colleges in Tirupur, Tiruvallur and Namakkal. “The inspections have been completed. We are awaiting their nod,” a senior official said.
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Monday, July 6, 2026
HC asks Ishari K. Ganesh to produce order closing bribery case against him, ex-Minister
HC asks Ishari K. Ganesh to produce order closing bribery case against him, ex-Minister
The issue relates to a 2022 suo motu First Information Report of the DVAC regarding the corruption in issuing ‘essentiality certificate’ to Vels Medical College, which was under construction then. It also accused former Minister C. Vijayabaskar of inducing an inspection team to submit a false report
The court was also told that the DVAC had recommended only departmental action against the four government doctors who were part of the inspection team.
Mohamed Imranullah S.
CHENNAI. 06.07.2026
The Madras High Court has granted a final opportunity, till July 13, to educationist, film producer and actor Ishari K. Ganesh to produce an order passed either by the State government or the Vigilance Commission in 2024 accepting the decision of the Directorate of Vigilance and Anti-Corruption (DVAC) to close a corruption case registered against him and former AIADMK Minister C. Vijayabaskar (now in the TVK) in 2022.
The First Division Bench of Chief Justice Sushrut Arvind Dharmadhikari and Justice G. Arul Murugan made it clear that Mr. Ganesh should produce within a week either the executive order accepting the DVAC’s closure report or a judicial order quashing the 2022 First Information Report (FIR) registered against him, failing which his present plea to quash an Enforcement Case Information Report (ECIR) shall be dismissed.
P. Sidharthan, Special Public Prosecutor for the Directorate of Enforcement (ED), brought it to the notice of the court that the DVAC had registered the FIR against Dr. Vijayabaskar; Mr. Ganesh; the Dean of Vels Medical College and Hospital in Tiruvallur district, K. Srinivasaraja; and four government doctors, R. Balajinathan, T.M. Manohar, J. Sujatha, and J.A. Vasanthakumar, on September 12, 2022.
The FIR was booked suo motu on the basis of intelligence collected by the DVAC that Mr. Ganesh of Vels Institute of Science, Technology and Advanced Studies (VISTAS), a deemed-to-be university, had in 2020 allegedly bribed the then Health Minister, Dr. Vijayabaskar, to obtain ‘essentiality certificate’ for the newly constructed Vels Medical College so that it could begin admitting 150 students to the MBBS course.
Under the Minimum Requirements for Annual M.B.B.S Admissions Regulations, 2020, the ‘essentiality certificate’ could be issued only if a private hospital had been in existence for a minimum of two years and was capable of being developed into a teaching hospital with a fully functional capacity of 300 beds. However, Vels Medical College was issued an ‘essentiality certificate’ even when its buildings were under construction, the FIR read.
It also accused Dr. Vijayabaskar of having induced the inspection team, comprising four doctors from the Government Mohan Kumaramangalam Medical College Hospital, to submit a false report. “The field verification report of the Assistant Director of Town and Country Planning, Tiruvallur, dated June 11, 2020, for building approval clearly proves that the buildings were under construction during the said period,” the FIR added.
However, when one of the accused, Dr. Balajinathan, filed a petition in the High Court in 2025 to quash the FIR only with respect to the charges levelled against him, the DVAC filed a counter-affidavit stating that it had closed the case against Dr. Vijayabaskar, Mr. Ganesh and Dr. Srinivasaraja since no incriminating evidence could be collected against the three individuals during the course of investigation.
DVAC report
The counter-affidavit also stated that the Vigilance Commission had accepted the report submitted by the DVAC to drop action against all the accused and forwarded it to the Public Department for passing orders. Further, the Vigilance Commission itself had issued an order on June 25, 2024, dropping action against Mr. Ganesh and Dr. Srinivasaraja since they were private individuals and not public servants.
The court was also told that the DVAC had recommended only departmental action against the four government doctors for the alleged lapses on their part during the inspection of the medical college. After recording the submissions, Justice Shamim Ahmed had on January 30, 2025 quashed all further proceedings initiated pursuant to the registration of the FIR against Dr. Balajinathan.
Relying upon that order, Mr. Ganesh had filed the present writ petition for quashing the ECIR registered against him by the ED, under the Prevention of Money Laundering Act of 2002, on March 23, 2023. The ECIR had been booked based on the FIR registered by the DVAC under the Prevention of Corruption Act, 1988. Since the FIR had been closed, the ECIR should also be declared illegal, he contended.
However, when the Chief Justice’s Bench insisted upon production of either an executive order or a judicial order on the closure of the predicate offence, the petitioner had been seeking time periodically since March 18, 2026. Hence, the judges on Friday granted him a final opportunity and warned that his plea to quash the ECIR would be dismissed if no such order was produced by July 13.
Sunday, July 5, 2026
State can’t undo 33-year-old appointment: Gujarat High Court
State can’t undo 33-year-old appointment: Gujarat High Court
July 5, 2026, 01.02 AM IST
Ahmedabad: 05.07.2026
The Gujarat HighCourt has quashed a state govt order cancelling an appointment of a teacher 33 years after he was given the job and some 17 years after his death, and stopping the pension being given to his widow.
In this case, Harshad Bhavsar, along with five others, was appointed as a teacher in its school by Sugyan Education Trust in 1988. After ascertaining he got requisite qualification for the post, his appointment was regularised by the district education officer in 1989. After serving for 16 years, Bhavsar died in 2004. The education department began paying family pension to Bhavsar’s widow, Manorama.
In 2021, the director of schools cancelled the appointment of six teachers and a librarian of the school, including that of Bhavsar, withdrew grant benefits, cancelled employee numbers and stopped salary payments under the Direct Salary Scheme.
The govt action was initiated following a complaint made in 2015 by the husband of then school principal, alleging that the appointments had been made in violation of recruitment rules. The govt cancelled the appointments on the grounds that they were based on forged documents, made without obtaining a no-objection certificate, without publishing advertisements and without seeking names from the employment exchange, causing a financial loss of over Rs 6 crore to the exchequer.
The school trust and the affected employees, including Bhavsar’s widow, challenged the order before HC in 2021. A single-judge bench quashed the govt’s s decision, ruling that appointments could not be cancelled after more than three decades.
However, the state govt appealed appealed against the order regarding the revocation of Bhavsar’s appointment.
Dismissing the appeal, a division bench of N S Sanjay Gowda and Justice J L Odedra said, “If an appointment was made in the year 1988, was regularised in 1989, the same cannot be subjected to a challenge or could be doubted by the state nearly 33 years after the appointment was made.”
The bench further said, “The state, after granting a family pension to the widow of the employee, is now doubting the very appointment itself, which its own officials had regularised. The learned single judge, in our view, has rightly quashed the order of cancellation and held that the state could not exercise its powers to cancel the appointment at such a belated stage.”
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