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Sunday, July 19, 2026
Dr. Ambedkar Law University cancels affiliation for three private law colleges
Dr. Ambedkar Law University cancels affiliation for three private law colleges
The Hindu Bureau
Chennai. 19.07.2026
The Tamil Nadu Dr. Ambedkar Law University has cancelled the affiliation of three private law colleges on charges of violating norms governing admission of students.
The Syndicate of the University, in its meeting early this month, passed a resolution cancelling the affiliation given to these colleges in 2025-26, according to a press release. The colleges in question are Thulasi Women’s Law College, Thoothukudi, S. Thangapazham Law College, Tenkasi, and Mukil Law College, Kanniyakumari.
Change in ownership
Sources in the TNDALU said that S. Thangapazham Law College had a change of ownership and the new Trust failed to obtain affiliation for the academic year 2026-27.
The other two colleges had applied for increased intake of students in 2025-26 and had secured provisional affiliation from the University.
As per rules, they had to seek the approval of the Bar Council of India, which had announced a nationwide moratorium on increase of seats or starting of new colleges in August last year.
They had admitted students in anticipation of approval from the Bar Council of India, which was accorded in April 2026, after the moratorium was lifted.
Violation of norms
The release stated that admitting students in anticipation of approval was a clear violation of established norms and rules.
The violation came to light at the time of registration of students for examination, the sources maintained.
The Syndicate, in its resolution, decided to not consider the application submitted by Thulasi Women’s Law College, the press release mentioned.
Remedial measures
However, it has resolved to constitute a committee to work out appropriate remedial measures for students who are already admitted keeping in mind their interest, it added.
NMC ends routine faculty eligibility clearances, puts onus on colleges
NMC ends routine faculty eligibility clearances, puts onus on colleges
Anuja.Jaiswal@timesofindia.com
New Delhi : 19.07.2026
Medical colleges across the country will now decide faculty appointments and promotions on their own, with National Medical Commission (NMC) ending routine eligibility clearances. Only exceptional cases involving regulatory ambiguity will be taken up by regulator for a non-refundable fee of Rs 25,000 plus GST.
The decision comes after the regulator observed that a large number of requests from faculty members, medical colleges, universities and NBEMS-accredited hospitals were being referred to it despite the Medical Institutions (Qualifications of Faculty) Regulations, 2025, clearly laying down the qualifications, teaching experience, research publication and training requirements for teaching posts.
Officials said the responsibility for deciding whether a candidate is eligible for. promotion or designation rests with the appointing authority, medical institution or university concerned. Accordingly, Post Graduate Medical Education Board (PGMEB) will no longer entertain cases where eligibility can be decided directly under the regulations.
Only cases involving genuine ambiguity, difficulty in interpreting regulations, equivalence of qualifications or transitional provisions will be considered by PGMEB. Such references must be routed through the dean, director, principal or registrar of the institution with supporting documents.
Individuals may approach NMC directly only if their institution fails to forward a genuine case within 60 days, after fulfilling the prescribed conditions and paying the stipulated fee.
“Many candidates approached the NMC even in straightforward cases because an NMC eligibility certificate was rarely questioned,” MARB president Prof M K Ramesh told TOI. NMC has also introduced a review mechanism for applicants dissatisfied with an institution’s decision.
With 15k MBBS seats, K’taka now leads medical edu race
With 15k MBBS seats, K’taka now leads medical edu race
6 Govt Colleges File Appeals Seeking More
Sruthy Susan Ullas & Srinivasa M | TNN
Bengaluru : 19.07.2026
Karnataka has become the state with the highest number of MBBS seats in the country this year, with the total rising to 15,395. The tally could increase further, as six govt medical colleges have filed appeals seeking additional seats
The latest increase comes from three govt colleges — HK Patil Institute of Medical Sciences, Karnataka Medical College and Research Institute, and Mandya Institute of Medical Sciences — each of which has been allotted 50 additional MBBS seats.
Across the state’s 24 govt medical colleges, the existing intake stood at 4,250 seats. With the addition of 150 seats, the total govt MBBS intake has now risen to 4,400.
Two new private medical colleges — Alva’s Institute of Medical Sciences and Chettinad Institute of Medical Education — have been granted 150 and 100 seats, respectively. In addition, 15 other private colleges have received approval for increased intake.
PES University Institute of Medical Sciences and Research, Sri Siddhartha Institute of Medical Sciences and Research, and BGS Global Institute of Medical Sciences have each been allotted 100 additional seats, while the remaining colleges have received 50 seats each. Altogether, private medical colleges have added 1,150 seats, taking their total MBBS intake to 10,995.
“Compared to private medical colleges, only a handful of govt medical colleges have 250 seats despite handling a much larger patient load and higher admissions in their teaching hospitals. Increasing intake in govt colleges will benefit both Karnataka students and candidates under the All-India quota. The National Medical Commission (NMC) should consider this factor while increasing seats,” a medical education department official said.
“Six govt colleges — in Karwar, Yadgir, Koppal, Haveri, Kodagu, and Shivamogga — have 1 appealed. We’re hopeful as NMC continues granting approvals until the last minute if the govt gives an undertaking to address deficiencies,” said Sujatha Rathod, director of medical education.
The new seat matrix released by Medical Assessment and Rating Board of NMC shows that the intake at govt run Mandya Institute of Medical Sciences (MIMS) has increased from 150 to 200 seats. Farookh Academy of Medical Education Hospital and Research Institute, Mysuru, has also been permitted to raise its intake from 100 to 150 seats.
MIMS director Dr Narashimhaswamy P said: “We will meet all the requirements stipulated by NMC for increasing the intake.” Last year, the annual MBBS intake at the century-old Mysore Medical College and Research Institute was increased from 200 to 250 seats. Another premier institution in the city, JSS Medical College, also has an annual intake of 250 seats. There is, however, no change in the annual intake of four other govt medical colleges in the region — Chikkamagaluru Institute of Medical Sciences, Chamarajanagar Institute of Medical Sciences, Hassan Institute of Medical Sciences and Kodagu Institute of Medical Sciences. The Hassan institute continues to have an annual intake of 200 seats, while the other three colleges have 150 seats each.
Saturday, July 18, 2026
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