Wednesday, September 29, 2021

VIT holds 36th annual convocation virtually


VIT holds 36th annual convocation virtually

Vellore Institute of Technology (VIT) conducted its 36th annual convocation virtually on Tuesday. A total of 7,569 undergraduate, postgraduate students, and research scholars graduated this year.

Published: 29th September 2021 05:40 AM |

The 36th annual convocation of VIT

By Express News Service

VELLORE: Vellore Institute of Technology (VIT) conducted its 36th annual convocation virtually on Tuesday. A total of 7,569 undergraduate, postgraduate students, and research scholars graduated this year.
Director of Indian Institute of Technology (IIT) Madras Prof Bhaskar Ramamurthi took part in the convocation as chief guest and delivered the convocation address virtually.

In his speech, Prof Bhaskar Ramamurthi said, “To use a familiar Indian description, one should aim for vidwath in at least a few subjects. But how do we know which ones to do this in, which subjects are likely to be useful in one’s career? Well, one cannot know this, and the curious thing is, it does not matter. What the effort itself does, irrespective of the subject, is teach one how to delve deep, how to know when one has understood the core underlying concepts well, and how to recognise when one is slowly but surely becoming a vidwan,” he said.

Founder and Chancellor of VIT Dr G Viswanathan said last year 844 national and international companies took part in VIT’s campus placement. He urged students to become employers rather than employees. “We have ample opportunity to manufacture and export to other countries. Our Prime Minister’s slogan Make in India can be fulfilled if there is cooperation between the Centre, State, private sectors, and capable individuals,” he said.

















Chennai colleges filling up, but Maths has few takers


Chennai colleges filling up, but Maths has few takers

Chennai colleges’ undergraduate seats are fast filling up, but there seems to be an exception. Top colleges here are hoping and waiting for candidates to opt for BSc Mathematics.

Published: 29th September 2021 07:03 AM 


Express News Service

CHENNAI: Chennai colleges’ undergraduate seats are fast filling up, but there seems to be an exception. Top colleges here are hoping and waiting for candidates to opt for BSc Mathematics. Five years ago, the demand for mathematics and other basic science subjects was so high that Loyola College started a second shift. But this year, almost 70 mathematics seats in Shift II are lying vacant, and about 15 physics and chemistry seats in the college are yet to be filled.

“The demand for basic science courses has been dwindling over the past few years as students are now more interested in computer-related subjects and commerce courses,” the college principal Thomas Amirtham says.

Overall, the number of applications received for basic science courses, such as physics, chemistry and mathematics, is 10-15 per cent less than last year, say the managements of colleges in the city, adding that they never expected to struggle to fill their mathematics seats.

The change is linked to the 100 per cent pass rate in the Class 12 exams, say academicians. “Since all students passed, they aspire to pursue professional courses, such as engineering and computer science,” says A Sudhakar, a retired college principal.

At Guru Nanak College, principal MG Ragunathan says there is an “unusual situation” — while all seats have been occupied, mathematics is the lone exception, with 10 out of 50 seats remaining vacant.
But at MOP Vaishnav College for Women, principal Lalita Balakrishnan is hopeful. The 15 (out of 70) vacant mathematics seats are likely to get filled once the NEET results are out and the engineering counselling is over, she says.

“The deadline for admission is October 6, so students who don’t get an engineering course of their choice or a good rank in NEET will seek admission for mathematics,” Balakrishnan explains. Some academicians, meanwhile, say the declining popularity of mathematics is worrying. “How will students learn the algorithms required for artificial intelligence and machine learning without mathematics?” wondered a professor from Anna University.

AIIMS associate prof in ‘fake’ certificate row

AIIMS associate prof in ‘fake’ certificate row

As per rules, a doctor requires three years teaching experience to become an associate professor at AIIMS.

Published: 28th September 2021 08:54 AM 

By Express News Service

BHUBANESWAR: AIIMS, Bhubaneswar has issued a show cause notice to Associate Professor of Burns and Plastic Surgery department Dr Sunil Kumar Rout asking him to submit evidence of his previous service at a private medical college and hospital (MCH). The notice was served following a complaint lodged with AIIMS president Prof Subrat Acharya regarding the ‘false’ experience certificate produced by Rout during the selection of faculty. It was alleged that Rout was selected on the basis of the certificate of experience of three years in Hi-Tech Medical College from 2010 to 2013 but there was no plastic surgery department in the MCH during the period.

As per rules, a doctor requires three years teaching experience to become an associate professor at AIIMS. As per the recommendation of the president, AIIMS Director Prof Gitanjali Batmanabane said, Rout has been asked to submit his experience certificate, salary slips and other related documents. “The selection of faculty is done as per the Department of Personnel and Training (DoPT) rules.

The person, who submits false information or forged documents, is responsible for the discrepancies and liable as per law. The next course of action will be decided after verification of the documents,” she said. Rout, who joined AIIMS in December 2017, has been given 10 days to reply to the notice. “I will submit all the documents sought by the Director and reply to the notice within the time frame,” he said.

60 students of Bengaluru private school test positive


60 students of Bengaluru private school test positive

59 pupils of residential school in quarantine; 1 hospitalised

29/09/2021

special correspondent Bengaluru

A new cluster with 60 COVID-19 positive cases has been detected at the Sri Chaitanya Girls’ Residential School, near Electronics City in Bengaluru.

Of the 60 students who have tested positive, one student, who had high fever, has been admitted to Lady Curzon and Bowring Hospital, one is under home quarantine, while the remaining 58 students are under quarantine in the hostel. The school, which had reopened on September 5, will now remain closed till October 20.

There were 485 students in the hostel and 57 staff, including 22 teachers. On September 26, one hostel inmate, said to be from Ballari, developed symptoms, including fever, vomiting and diarrhoea, and tested positive for COVID-19, BBMP’s health officials said.

Centre’s nod for admission of 850 students to 7 new medical colleges

Centre’s nod for admission of 850 students to 7 new medical colleges

Three colleges allowed to take in 150 students, says Health Minister

29/09/2021

Ma. Subramanian

Special CorrespondentCHENNAI

The Union government has given its approval for admission of 850 students to seven of the 11 new government medical colleges in Tamil Nadu this year, Health Minister Ma. Subramanian said on Tuesday.

While the colleges at Virudhunagar, Kallakurichi and Udhagamandalam were permitted to admit 150 students each, those at Namakkal, Tiruppur, Ramanathapuram and Tiruvallur would admit 100 students each, he told reporters.

The National Medical Commission had conducted inspections at all 11 colleges. “The inspection team pointed out minor deficiencies at the colleges at Dindigul, Krishnagiri, Nagapattinam and Ariyalur. By small deficiencies, they stressed the need for additional buildings. The work will be completed in 10 days; thereafter, we will seek a re-inspection,” he said.

With all the works completed at the colleges at Virudhunagar, Kallakurichi and Udhagamandalam, an intake of 150 students each was approved, he said. The inspection team had laid down conditions to take up some minor works at the colleges at Namakkal, Tiruppur, Ramanathapuram and Tiruvallur. These works would be completed soon. Accordingly, admission of 100 students each had been approved for these colleges. Once the deficiencies were rectified, the government would seek a re-inspection of these four colleges to get the approval for admission to the remaining seats.

“The Union government has approved admission of a total of 850 students. The total number of 1,650 seats should be approved at these colleges [11 colleges]. We will rectify all minor deficiencies in 10-15 days. We expect to get approval for the remaining number of seats by October-end after the team conducts a re-inspection,” he said

Functionalities are user profile specific: IRCTC


Functionalities are user profile specific: IRCTC

29/09/2021

Special Correspondent CHENNAI

The Indian Railway Catering and Tourism Corporation (IRCTC) has stated that there is no chance of cancelling a train ticket by using a different user identity and password.

Referring to a report titled “Teen flags bug in IRCTC’s system” published in these columns on September 21, 2021, IRCTC’s spokesperson Anand Kumar Jha said that there was no scope to cancel a ticket or change the boarding station, by taking advantage of a vulnerability since the functionalities were user profile specific.

But, he said the issue of accessing the transaction details by changing the transaction identity had been fixed on second September 2, 2021.

P. Renganathan, 17, Chennai-based XII Standard student who flagged the issue had written to the the Computer Emergency Response Team stating that he had discovered a critical vulnerability that leaked the transaction details of millions of travellers.

Explaining how the private data could be accessed, Renganathan said that by changing the transaction identity one could gain access to others travel details.

To this, CERT thanked the teenager and confirmed by email that the vulnerability had been fixed.

Schools to reopen in T.N. for classes 1 to 8 on November 1

Schools to reopen in T.N. for classes 1 to 8 on November 1

Decision is based on inputs from experts, says CM

29/09/2021

Back to school: Standard operating procedure must be strictly followed in schools.

Special CorrespondentCHENNAI

The Tamil Nadu government on Tuesday allowed in-person classes for students of classes 1 to 8 from November 1. The standard operating procedure issued in this regard must be strictly followed, it said.

In a statement, Chief Minister M.K. Stalin said the decision was based on the inputs from medical experts, educationists and parents.

Students of classes 9 to 12 have already been attending in-person classes.

The experts had contended that students of classes 1 to 8 were under immense stress and experienced a gap in learning as they did not attend in-person classes and remained at home for several months because of the COVID-19 restrictions, Mr. Stalin said.

The School Education Department would make preliminary arrangements for the resumption of in-person classes. He said the lockdown would be in place in the State till 6 a.m. on October 31.

850 more MBBS seats this year in TN


850 more MBBS seats this year in TN

Admissions Okayed In 7 New Colleges

TIMES NEWS NETWORK

Chennai:29.09.2021

The Centre has granted permission to Tamil Nadu to admit 850 students to undergraduate courses in seven new government medical colleges this academic year, health minister Ma Subramanian said on Tuesday. This will take the total MBBS seats in the state to 4,300.

On Monday, deans of three colleges in Virudhunagar, Kallakurichi and Ooty received permission to start admission with 150 students each. Four other medical colleges in Namakkal, Tiruvallur, Tirupur and Ramanathapuram have been granted permission to admit 100 students each.

Last year, the Directorate of Medical Education applied for permission to start 11 new medical colleges with 150 MBBS seats each. The National Medical Commission sent inspection teams of all these institutions between July and August. The panel of inspectors verified the infrastructure and human resources facility required to admit students for the first year MBBS course in these newly constructed colleges. They visited hospitals, anatomy, physiology and biochemistry labs, library, hostels – required for first year students.

Based on reports from the inspection committee, the centre has asked Tamil Nadu to upgrade infrastructure, mostly civil works, in Dindigul, Krishnagiri, Ariyalur and Nagapattinam medical colleges. “Most of these are civil work and are expected to be completed in ten days,” said Ma Subramanian. “We will reapply for inspection to these colleges in October. We will also ask for an additional 50 seats in Namakkal, Tirupur, Tiruvallur and Ramanathapuram. We are hopeful of getting 850 more seats for the coming academic year. If that happens, the total number of seats will go up to 5,200," he said.

While analysts in private coaching institutes are predicting tough competition for medical admissions, these additional seats will allow more aspirants to join the course, they say. In 2020, the NEET cut off for the open category was 598, followed by 554 for BC, 527 for BCM, 521 of MBC, 443 for SC, 375 for SCA and 346 for ST at the government colleges. “This year, the NEET score may be higher, and the competition is likely to get tougher. Additional seats will offer more space for meritorious students,” said Malini Ravichandran, who coaches students for NEET.

Besides offering medical education, these colleges will help the state expand tertiary care to districts. Most of these colleges will have 700-750 bed hospitals attached to these colleges that have all the facilities to offer quality care, he said. The new medical colleges will help the health department provide quality medical training at affordable cost and offer speciality and super speciality care to people living in the area free of cost, said health secretary J Radhakrishnan.

Tuesday, September 28, 2021

Resignation Once Accepted Can't Be Withdrawn Citing Mere Delay In Relieving Employee : Supreme Court


Resignation Once Accepted Can't Be Withdrawn Citing Mere Delay In Relieving Employee : Supreme Court


27 Sep 2021 8:31 PM

The Supreme Court has observed that mere delay in relieving an employee from his duties does not impact the acceptance of his resignation. The Court rejected the argument of the employee that he was entitled to withdraw the resignation citing the delay in relieving him of his duties.

"Once such a resignation was accepted, and not even assailed, there could be no question of the respondent being permitted to resign post acceptance of the resignation. It was only a postponement of the cut off date for administrative reasons, which merely delayed the relieving of the respondent and did not defer the acceptance of the resignation", a bench comprising Justices Sanjay Kishan Kaul and MM Sundresh observed in the case M/s New Victoria Mills & Ors. V. Shrikant Arya.

"The mere fact that some staff continued to work after the closure of the Mill, or the fact that some people may have been deployed in other mills cannot help the respondent's case for reinstatement," the bench added.

Factual Background

Shrikant Arya (respondent in the present case) was working as a Supervisor (Maintenance) in National Textile Corporation Limited ("NTC"/ appellant No 1 in the present case) since 1991 and was thereafter transferred to another industrial unit set up by National Textile Corporation (Uttar Pradesh) Limited, Kanpur (appellant No 2).

Since the textile industry went through difficult times at the turn of the century, appellant No 3 propounded a Modified Voluntary Retirement Scheme ('MVRS/Scheme') to facilitate voluntary retirement of employees and workers in NTC and NTC (UP), Kanpur.

For availing the opportunity under MVRS as per which resignation had to be brought into force forthwith with the only request of disbursing payment for all the benefits of service promptly , Arya addressed a letter dated July 12, 2002. Since there was a pre existing dispute between Arya and NTC relating to deposits in his provident fund account, Arya later made a request for keeping his application under suspension till the provident fund amount was not deposited in his account.

On May 28, 2003 a general information was issued about acceptance of letters of resignation under MVRS in which Arya's name also appeared as per which he had to retire from the services of the mill on June 1, 2003. On June 2, 2003, NTC issued a letter to Arya in which he was advised to attend to his duties since the earlier cut off date was cancelled and a new date had to come into effect shortly.

In the aforesaid scenario, Arya addressed a letter dated July 1, 2003 requesting to cancel his letter dated July 12, 2002 since he had changed his mind about submitting his resignation under the MVRS but on July 14, 2003 Arya's letter under the MVRS was accepted and he had to retire on July 16, 2003.

Aggrieved, Arya approached the Allahabad High Court by way of a writ seeking for quashing of order dated July 14, 2003, direction to the authorities to allow him to join his duties on the post of Supervisor (Maintenance) and payment of all the emoluments to which he was entitled. Arya also sought for payment of his back wages since July 16, 2003 and issuance of directions to permit him to work on the post till the age of his superannuation when he would be entitled to all his retiral benefits.

Case Before Single Judge of Allahabad High Court

Ruling in favour of Arya, the single judge found that it was "not clear" that at any point of time, Arya had given an unconditional offer of resignation under the MVRS. The Single Judge further noted that rather Arya's resignation was conditional on the payment of all dues, which included the provident fund dues which should be first cleared and paid to him.

Case Before Division Bench of Allahabad High Court

Aggrieved by the Single Judge's order NTC filed an appeal before the division bench of the High Court. The Division Bench on March 12, 2019 upheld the Single Judge's order.

The NTC in a civil appeal approached the Top Court.

Counsel's Submissions

Counsel for NTC submitted that Arya had not challenged the letters dated May 28, 2003 and June 2, 2003 that had effectively accepted Arya's resignation request under the MVRS which implied that his acceptance by NTC was complete. It was also contended that Arya had only challenged the revised cut off date, assailing the letter dated July 14, 2003 and July 16, 2003.

Once such a resignation was accepted, and not even assailed, there could be no question of the Arya being permitted to resign post acceptance of the resignation, NTC further contended.

Reliance was placed on the Top Court's judgement in Air India Express Limited & Ors. v. Captain Gurdarshan Kaur Sandhu (2019) 17 SCC 129 to support the plea that mere delay in relieving someone from their duties does not impact the acceptance of their resignation.

Relying on the Top Court's judgements in J.N. Srivastava v. Union of India &Anr. (1998) 9 SCC 559 and Shambhu Murari Sinha v. Project & Development India &Anr (2000) 5 SCC 621. Arya's counsel contended that an employee had a right to withdraw his application for voluntary retirement even after its acceptance if such withdrawal was done prior to the date of employee's actual retirement. It was also contended that the jural relationship of employer and employee between NTC and Arya continued till July 16, 2003 and thus, Arya had locus poenitentiae to withdraw his resignation on July 1, 2003.

Arya's counsel also submitted that the application submitted by Arya was in the nature of an offer and since Arya suspended his resignation vide letter dated 03.03.2003 till such time as NTC deposited his provident fund dues and, thus, the offer stood revoked.

The counsel also referred to the Top Court's judgement in Food Corporation of India & Anr. v. RamKesh Yadav &Anr (2007) 9 SCC 531 to submit that in case of a conditional offer, the offeree could accept a part of the offer which results in performance by the offeror and then reject the condition subject to which the offer is made.

Court's Observations

On the aspect as to whether Arya's resignation was conditional, the bench after taking into consideration the letter dated July 12, 2002 observed that the mere assertion that all benefits arising out of the service period of the applicant would be paid to him was a natural corollary of their resignation and further observed that such a resignation could hardly be called conditional.

"The aforesaid being the position; if we look at this resignation letter under the Scheme, no doubt in terms of Clause 1.6 of the MVRS, the option lay with the management to decline an application without assigning any reasons. That again, to our mind, will not make the resignation conditional. In a contractual context, it would be an offer made by an employee under the Scheme which may or may not be accepted by the appellant-management. Once the acceptance takes place, the contract stands concluded. No doubt such acceptance has to be in terms of the Scheme," Court noted.

With regards to whether the subsequent communications of Arya could give the resignation letter a colour of a conditional resignation and whether the withdrawal was prior to its acceptance, the bench observed that once the letter of resignation was accepted on 28.05.2003, the post stood abolished.

"In contractual terms, appellant No. 1's acceptance of the respondent's offer of resignation as available under the MVRS was completed on 28.05.2003. The respondent cannot be permitted to take advantage of the postponement of the cut off date by a few days, during which time the respondent was asked to attend to office, albeit against no sanctioned post," the bench observed in this context.

The bench also upheld NTC's contention that mere delay in relieving Arya from duties would not impact the acceptance of his resignation.

The Court thereafter while setting aside the order passed by the High Court observed that Arya's resignation letter stood accepted on May 28, 2003 and that he was entitled to benefits under the scheme which had been paid to him without any prejudice to his rights and contentions in the proceedings.

Case Title: M/s New Victoria Mills & Ors. V. Shrikant Arya

Coram: Justice SK Kaul and Justice MM Sundresh

Citation : LL 2021 SC 506

Resignation Once Accepted Can't Be Withdrawn Citing Mere Delay In Relieving Employee : Supreme Court

Resignation Once Accepted Can't Be Withdrawn Citing Mere Delay In Relieving Employee : Supreme Court: The Supreme Court has observedthat mere delay in relie

Pension revision in Kerala University in limbo


Pension revision in Kerala University in limbo

Majority of the 20,000 university pensioners in the state who would benefit from the order belong to the University of Kerala.

Published: 28th September 2021 07:14 AM 

By Express News Service

THIRUVANANTHAPURAM: The pension revision of former employees of the University of Kerala continues to be in limbo as the syndicate is adamant that the government should do away with its condition that additional expense arising out of the revision should be borne by the varsity using its “own funds”.

A recent meeting of the KU syndicate did not take up the matter for discussion even as other universities have started implementing pension revision. Even though the vice-chancellor of the University of Kerala initially issued an order for carrying out the revision, it was later cancelled citing fund crunch.

Majority of the 20,000 university pensioners in the state who would benefit from the order belong to the University of Kerala. According to sources, the university will have to shell out around `24 crore annually and also disburse `50 crore as arrears if the revision is implemented.

“The government issued the pension revision order taking into account that the university has `270 crore in its kitty as special fund,” said a source. However, it is learnt that the university has taken up the matter with the government and requested enhanced non-plant grant to meet the additional financial commitment.

Over the years, the revenue sources of universities have been dwindling. Distance education courses, a major revenue generating source for the varsity, have been badly hit following the government’s decision to establish the Sree Narayana Guru Open University (SNGOU).

High court directs govt to spot, deport overstaying foreigners


High court directs govt to spot, deport overstaying foreigners

Asks TN DGP to Establish A Separate Wing For Monitoring

Sureshkumar.K@timesgroup.com

Chennai:28.09.2021

Flagging the menace of foreigners overstaying in India, and resorting to ‘nefarious activities’, the Madras high court has directed the TN director general of police to establish a separate wing in each district to monitor movement of foreign nationals.

Police should take immediate steps to deport foreigners found overstaying without a valid visa, said Justice M Dhandapani, adding that many illegal immigrants commit petty crimes just to stay back in India.

Justice Dhandapani directed the Union home ministry to consider bringing in a new law to prevent such illegal migrants from extending their stay citing pending court proceedings in India.

The judge was passing orders while dismissing a batch of anticipatory bail and bail applications moved by persons belonging to Sri Lanka, Nigeria, China, Iran and Bangladesh.

“The safety and security of a country lies in the proper implementation of the procedures relating to entry and exit of persons originating from other countries,” the judge said.

They are either overstaying within the Indian territory beyond the validity of their visa or have entered the country illegally without proper immigration/visa document.

“This is not a case in isolation, where, persons of different nationalities, under the guise of business/employment/tourist enter the country and overstay the visa period, without resorting to have their visa extended,” Justice Dhandapani said.

Many forms of crimes are perpetrated by such individuals, shaking the very economic stability, peace and tranquillity of the country. Such acts should be nipped in the bud, else the same would have major ramifications, not only to the economic stability, but also to the security of the country, he added.

“It is to be pointed out that day in and day out, the security of our motherland is being jeopardized due to the lethargic act of the governmental machinery in not adhering to the guidelines issued by the Union home ministry pertaining to deportation/ repatriation of the foreign nationals, who stay put in the country without any valid visa,” Justice Dhandapani said.

Not only the said individuals infract the law, by being in the Indian territory without any valid visa, many of such individuals misuse the stay and indulge in very many nefarious activities which are detrimental to the nation as a whole, the court asserted.

The court adjourned the cases to January 4, 2022 for the authorities to report compliance.

Justice Dhandapani directed the Union home ministry to consider bringing in a new law to prevent such illegal migrants from extending their stay citing pending court proceedings in India

Engg counselling: Competition fierce this year, experts ask students to list more choices for seat



PROCESS BEGINS

Engg counselling: Competition fierce this year, experts ask students to list more choices for seat

TIMES NEWS NETWORK

Chennai:28.09.2021

With 5,000 more students competing for seats in top engineering colleges in the first round of counselling compared to last year, experts say it would be smarter for students to list more choices for better chances of a seat allotment.

General online counselling to fill 1.4 lakh seats in 440 engineering colleges will be conducted from September 27 to October 17. More than 1.3 lakh students are expected to take part in the four rounds of counselling this year.

As many as 14,788 candidates with cutoff mark range 200 to 186 will be called for the first round of counselling that began with fee payment on Monday. In comparison, only around 9,000 candidates took part in the first round last year. Candidates can update their choices on October 1 and 2 for the first round.

Experts advised students to prepare a list of choices well ahead of the schedule, enter their choices with college codes to avoid any confusion between colleges bearing similar names, and to avoid doing the step at browsing centres to avoid middlemen.

Career consultant Jayaprakash Gandhi said students can use last year’s rankings as a guide while choosing preferences. “The cut-off will have huge variation compared to last year. Students called for the first round need to give more choices as more students are competing in this band this year. Particularly, students with cut-off in the range of 186 to 192 should give at least 200 choices to get seat allotment,” he said.

He urged students to verify the college’s infrastructure, fees and placement details before listing it as a choice. “They should lock the choices only after several rounds of verification. They also need to confirm the tentative seat allotment to get provisional allotment,” he added.

P V Navaneethakrishnan, former director of entrance examinations and admissions, Anna University, said students should select a course based on aptitude and basic liking instead of peer pressure. To avoid getting confused with all the 60 or more branches available, he suggested grouping engineering branches into seven large groups. “Students need to consider potential job opportunities, pay packages, and prospects to study further before selecting a course,” he said.

He also asked the students to select colleges based on infrastructure facilities, quality of teaching, NAAC and NBA accreditation status and placements.

Angry over birth of twin girls, man kills wife


Angry over birth of twin girls, man kills wife

Hyderabad:28.09.2021

Upset at the birth of twin daughters, a man in Telangana’s Jogulamba-Gadwal district killed his wife in a fit of rage.

Venkatesh, an employee at the local mandal praja parishad office married Pavani Annapurna, 28, a few years ago and was blessed with a girl child, which police sources said irked him. Pavani, during her second pregnancy, gave birth to twin girls on September 22. “On Saturday night, Venkatesh picked up an argument with Pavani and strangulated her later,” police officials said. TNN

Don’t play football with lives of young doctors: SC to govt


Don’t play football with lives of young doctors: SC to govt

Says Reconsider Move On NEET-SS Question Pattern

Dhananjay.Mahapatra@timesgroup.com

New Delhi:28.09.2021

The Supreme Court on Monday accused the National Medical Council, National Board of Examinations and the health ministry of “playing football” with the lives of young doctors aspiring to do their specialisation by changing the pattern of questions for the NEET-Super Speciality Examination more than a month after notifying the exam date.

As many as 41 doctors through advocate Javedur Rehman had moved SC alleging that though the examination dates of November13 and14 was notified on July 23, the NMC/NBE issued a notification on August 31, arbitrarily changing the pattern of questions and subject-wise distribution of marks to jeopardise the future of young doctors. Appearing for the petitioners, senior advocate Shyam Divan said months of preparation for NEET-SS has been affected by the decision of the authorities to change the rules of the game much after the play has begun.

A bench of Justices D Y Chandrachud and B V Nagarathna came down heavily on NMC, NBC and the ministries of health as well as social welfare for arbitrarily effecting the change and asked additional solicitor general Aishwarya Bhati, NBE counsel Maninder Singh and NMC counsel Gaurav Sharma to ask all the authorities involved in the change of question pattern to urgently hold a meeting and “put their house in order”.

Justice Chandrachud-led bench said, “We are putting you to notice: If we are not satisfied with the reasons for effecting the change in question pattern mid-way, then we will pass strictures against the authorities.”

When Singh said change was in the offing for a long time and the notification was issued as soon as all necessary clearances were received, the bench said, “The change in pattern could have been made effective from next year. The students have been preparing for months in advance. Why would you change rules of the game mid-way? Tell authorities that we are very dissatisfied with the way they are playing with the lives of young doctors.”

Put your house in order, SC tells Centre on NEET

Don’t treat the young doctors like footballs just because you have the power (to change the examination pattern). Hold a meeting this week and put your house in order. We will not permit you to play with the lives of young doctors,” the Supreme Court bench said, adding, “The pattern of preparation for any examination depends on the pattern of question papers. If you (authorities) change it midway, then it will leave many ruffled.” “Since 2018, a pattern of questions and subject-wise distribution of marks has been followed — 60% of questions from the area of specialisation and 40% from feeder courses. How could you suddenly make it 100% from the general medicine subject?” the bench asked.

The NMC counsel said that it was to ensure that not many seats in the super speciality courses go vacant. The reply, however, did not satisfy the SC, which asked for a better explanation.





SC: Forcible unnatural sex with wife a heinous crime


SC: Forcible unnatural sex with wife a heinous crime

Dhananjay.Mahapatra@timesgroup.com

New Delhi:28.09.2021

The Supreme Court on Monday said forcible unnatural sex with wife by husband is a heinous offence, especially as it had led her to commit suicide, and refused bail to the man who has been in custody for more than two years for allegedly demanding dowry, domestic violence and committing the offence under Section 377 of Indian Penal Code. A bench of Chief Justice N V Ramana and Justices Surya Kant and Hima Kohli refused bail to one Pradeep, who is said to have tortured his wife by forcibly committing unnatural sex with her after her family failed to meet his dowry demands.

The CJI-led bench said Section 377 is a very serious offence and that the accused husband did not deserve leniency at the stage of investigation. “We do not know what the police are doing. You started demanding dowry. When her family could not meet those demands, you started harassing her. You circulated her private pictures and videos on social media and tried to blackmail her. Above all, you allegedly had forcible unnatural sex with her leading to her suicide. You deserve no leniency as this is a heinous crime.” When the petitioner’s counsel said that the man is a government servant and would lose his job if not granted bail, the bench said, “It is ok if such persons lose their jobs. You better stay in jail.” The petitioner was seeking regular bail in respect of FIR No 595 dated July 23, 2019 lodged by the victim’s brother at Bhiwani Sadar police station in Haryana’s Bhiwani district, under Sections 148, 149, 323, 377 and 306 of the IPC.

The deceased’s brother said the marriage of his sister with Pardeep (petitioner) was solemnised in 2011.

Monday, September 27, 2021

ID Act - Burden Is On Employee To Prove He Was Not Gainfully Employed After Dismissal : Supreme Court

ID Act - Burden Is On Employee To Prove He Was Not Gainfully Employed After Dismissal : Supreme Court: The Supreme Court on September 24 observed that whether a

NEET SS 2021: OCI Cardholder Gets HC Nod to Apply for exam

NEET SS 2021: OCI Cardholder Gets HC Nod to Apply for exam: New Delhi: Taking note of the fact that the petitioner doctor, who is an OCI cardholder, has pursued her MBBS and MS courses from India, the Delhi High Court bench on Thursday allowed her to...

பெண்ணின் நிராகரிப்பை ஆண் ஏற்றுக்கொள்ள வேண்டும்



பெண்ணின் நிராகரிப்பை ஆண் ஏற்றுக்கொள்ள வேண்டும்



27.09.2021  THE HINDU TAMIL 

சில நாட்களுக்கு முன்பு தாம்பரம் ரயில் நிலைய வாயிலில் கல்லூரி மாணவி ஒருவரை இளைஞர் ஒருவர் கொலை செய்த சம்பவம் பெரும் அதிர்ச்சியை ஏற்படுத்தியது. அவர்கள் இருவரும் சில காலங்கள் பழகியதாகவும், அதற்குப் பிறகு அந்தப் பெண் அவரிடம் பேசுவதைத் தவிர்த்ததாகவும், அதனால் கோபமடைந்த இளைஞன் இப்படிப்பட்ட சம்பவத்தில் ஈடுபட்டதாகவும் செய்திகளில் தெரியவந்தது. சமீப காலங்களில் நாம் தொடர்ச்சியாக இது போன்ற செய்திகளைக் கவனித்துவருகிறோம். ஒரு பெண் தன்னை நிராகரிப்பதை ஏற்றுக்கொள்ள முடியாமல், அந்தப் பெண்ணைக் கொலை செய்யும் அளவுக்குத் துணிவது பல கேள்விகளை எழுப்புகிறது.

ஒரு பெண் தனக்குக் கட்டுப்பட வேண்டும், அவளுக்கென்று தனிப்பட்ட விருப்பங்கள் ஏதும் இருக்கக் கூடாது, தன்னைப் பற்றியே சிந்திக்க வேண்டும், தன்னைத் தாண்டி அவளுக்கு வேறு எதுவும் முக்கியமானதாக இருக்கக் கூடாது என்ற மூர்க்கத்தனமான பழமைவாத ஆண்மையச் சிந்தனையின் நீட்சியே ஒருவனை இப்படிப்பட்ட மனநிலையை நோக்கித் தள்ளுகிறது. ஒரு பெண்ணின் விருப்பம் இல்லாமல் அவளைப் பின்தொடர்வதோ அல்லது தன்னைக் காதலிக்குமாறு கட்டாயப்படுத்துவதோ ஒரு கதாநாயக பிம்பமாகத் திரைப்படங்களில் வலிந்து திணிக்கப்படுகிறது. இந்தத் திரை நாயகர்களைத் தங்களின் ஆதர்சமாக எடுத்துக்கொள்ளும் இந்த இளைஞர்கள், இந்தச் செயலைக் கொஞ்சம்கூடக் குற்றவுணர்வின்றிச் செய்யத் தொடங்குகிறார்கள். ஒரு பெண் ஒரு ஆணை நிராகரிக்கிறாள் என்றால், அதற்கு ஆண்களிடம் பல காரணங்கள் இருக்கின்றன, அப்படி எதுவும் இல்லையென்றாலும் அவனை நிராகரிப்பதற்கான முழு உரிமை அந்தப் பெண்ணுக்கு உண்டு; அது எந்த வகையிலும் அந்தப் பெண்ணின் தவறல்ல என்பதை ஆண் உணர்ந்துகொள்ள வேண்டும். இந்தச் சமூகம் அவனுக்குள் அந்த உணர்வை ஏற்படுத்த வேண்டும்.

பொதுவாகவே, ஒரு குடும்ப அமைப்புக்கே குழந்தைகளுக்கு அறநெறிகளை ஊட்டி வளர்க்க வேண்டிய பொறுப்பு இருக்கிறது. சக மனிதர்களை மதிப்பது முதல் சமூகத்தின் மீதான நன்மதிப்புகளை உருவாக்கிக்கொள்வது வரை ஒருவர் அவரது குடும்பத்திலிருந்தே அத்தனையையும் பெற வேண்டும். ஆனால், அதைச் சொல்லிக்கொடுக்கும் இடத்தில் நமது குடும்ப அமைப்புகள் இருக்கின்றனவா? சாதி முதல் அத்தனை பாகுபாடுகளையும் அதன் இறுக்கம் குறையாமல் பாதுகாக்கும் அமைப்பாகவே பெரும்பாலான குடும்பங்கள் இங்கு இருக்கின்றன. ஆண்-பெண் பாகுபாடுகளையும் குடும்ப அமைப்புகள் சமரசமின்றிப் பாதுகாக்கின்றன. ஒரு ஆணுக்கு இலகுவானதாக இருக்கும் நமது குடும்ப அமைப்பு, பெண் என்றால் வலிந்து கட்டுப்பாடுகளை உருவாக்கிக்கொள்கிறது. சிறு வயதிலிருந்தே ஆண் குழந்தையை வளர்ப்பதிலும் பெண் குழந்தைகளை வளர்ப்பதிலும் பல பாகுபாடுகளைக் கொண்டுள்ளதாக நமது குடும்பங்கள் இருக்கின்றன. இதைப் பார்த்து வளரும் ஆண் சிறு வயதிலிருந்தே பெண் என்பவள் தனக்குக் கீழானவள் என்ற எண்ணத்துடனே வளர்கிறான். அதனால், ஒரு பெண் மீது பிரயோகிக்கப்படும் வன்முறைகள் அவனுக்குத் தவறானதாகத் தெரியவில்லை. சில நேரங்களில் அது கொண்டாடவும் படுகிறது “ஒரு பொண்ணு உனக்கே இவ்வளவு இருந்தா... ஆம்பள எனக்கு எவ்வளவு இருக்கும்” என்ற வீர வசனங்களை சினிமாவிலிருந்து மட்டுமல்ல, தனது சொந்த வீட்டிலிருந்துமே ஒருவன் பெறுகிறான்.

அறநெறிகளைப் பற்றியோ சக மனிதர்களின் மீதான மாண்பைப் பற்றியோ துளியும் கவலையில்லாமல் ஒருவன் வளரும்போது அதைக் குடும்பமும் சமூகமும் ஆரம்பத்திலேயே கவனித்து, அவனது நடவடிக்கைகளைச் சீர்ப்படுத்த வேண்டும். ஒரு குற்றச் செயலில் அவன் ஈடுபடும்போது அதைத் தவறென்று சுட்டிக்காட்ட வேண்டும், வன்முறையோ வெறுப்போ எத்தனை ஆபத்தானது என்பதை அவனுக்குப் புரிய வைக்க வேண்டும். தோல்விகளை ஏற்றுக்கொள்ளும் மனநிலையை வளர்க்க வேண்டும். நமது கல்வி முறையின் முதன்மை நோக்கமாக மாணவர்களை இப்படிப் பண்படுத்துவதும் அவர்களுக்குள் அறநெறிகளை வளர்ப்பதுமாக இருக்க வேண்டும். ஆனால், மதிப்பெண்களைப் பிரதானமாகக் கருதும் கல்வி முறையில் அறநெறிகள் பின்தள்ளப்பட்டு வெகுகாலமாகின்றன. நல்ல மதிப்பெண் வாங்கும் மாணவர் தனிப்பட்ட வாழ்வில் எந்த அறநெறிகளும் இல்லாமலும் இருக்கலாம்; அதைப் பற்றி யாரும் கவலை கொள்வதில்லை.


ஆண்-பெண் பாகுபாடில்லாமல் குழந்தைகளை வளர்ப்பது, பெண்களைக் குடும்பத்தில் சமமாக நடத்துவது, அவர்களின் முடிவுகளை மதிப்பது, அவர்களின் சுதந்திரத்தை அனுமதிப்பது, ஆண் மையச் சொல்லாடல்களைக் கவனமாகத் தவிர்ப்பது போன்றவற்றையெல்லாம் குடும்ப அமைப்பு கடைப்பிடிக்க வேண்டும். வெறும் வார்த்தைகளால் மட்டுமில்லாமல், தங்களது நடவடிக்கைகளிலேயே குடும்ப உறுப்பினர்கள் அதை வெளிப்படுத்த வேண்டும். அதைப் பார்த்து வளரும் ஒரு சிறுவன் இயல்பாகவே பெண்களை மதிக்கக்கூடியவனாகவும், அவர்களின் உணர்வுகளைப் புரிந்துகொள்ளக் கூடியவனாகவும் வளர்வான். ஒரு பெண்ணோடு பழகும்போதும் அல்லது பிரியும்போதும் முழுமையாக அவளின் நிலையை உணர்ந்துகொள்ளும் பக்குவத்தை, அவளின் முடிவை ஏற்றுக்கொள்ளும் நிதானத்தை இப்படி வளரும் ஆண்களே கொண்டிருப்பார்கள்.

சமூக வலைதளங்களின் வரவுக்குப் பிறகு, நவீன கால இளைஞர்களுக்கிடையே ஆழமான உறவு என்பதே குறைந்திருக்கிறதாக நினைக்கிறேன். ஒரு உறவின் மீதான பிணைப்பைவிடத் தனிப்பட்ட சுயநலன்களைப் பெரிதாகக் கொண்ட தலைமுறை உருவாகிவருகிறது. ஆண்-பெண் இருவருக்கிடையேயான உறவில் பரஸ்பர அன்பைவிட, பரஸ்பர அங்கீகாரங்களைவிட சுய தேவைகளை நிறைவேற்றிக்கொள்வது பிரதானமாக இருப்பதை இந்தக் காலத்து இளைய தலைமுறையினரிடம் உணர்கிறேன். இந்த சுய பிம்பம் கேள்வி கேட்கப்படும்போதோ அல்லது நிராகரிக்கப்படும்போதோ அது அவர்களைப் பதற்றப்படுத்துகிறது; அதன் வழியாக அவர்கள் நிதானம் இழக்கிறார்கள்.

இளைஞர்களிடம் சமீப காலங்களில் அதிகரித்துவரும் பரஸ்பர வெறுப்பும், வன்முறைப் போக்குகளுமேகூட இப்படிப்பட்ட சம்பவங்களுக்குக் காரணமாக இருக்கின்றன. எந்த ஒரு விஷயத்திலும் ஆழமான புரிதல் இல்லாமல் மேலோட்டமாக இருப்பது, எளிதில் உணர்ச்சி வசப்படுபவர்களாகவும் அரசியல் தெளிவற்றவர்களாகவும் இருப்பது, சமூக வலைதளங்களின் அங்கீகாரத்துக்காக நிஜ உலகில் யாருடனும் பிணைப்பில்லாமல் தனிமையில் உழல்வது, இதனால் தன்னிச்சையாக எழும் தாழ்வுமனப்பான்மையும், சக மனிதர்களின் மீதான பொறாமையையும் எப்போதும் மனதில் கொண்டிருப்பது போன்றவையெல்லாம் பெருவாரியான இன்றைய இளைஞர்களிடம் காண முடிகிறது. இவற்றின் காரணமாக ஒரு குற்றச் செயலில் ஈடுபடும் மனநிலையை அவர்கள் மிக சுலபமாகப் பெற்றுவிடுகிறார்கள் அது சார்ந்த குற்றவுணர்ச்சியும், சமூகப் பொறுப்பும் இல்லாத நிலையில் அவர்கள் அந்தக் குற்றத்தையும் கண நேரத்தில் செய்துவிடுகிறார்கள்.

ஒரு முதிர்ச்சியான சமூகமாக இது போன்ற சம்பவங்கள் நடக்காமல் தடுப்பதில் நம் எல்லோருக்கும் ஏதோ ஒரு வகையில் பங்கு இருக்கிறது. நம் இளைஞர்களின் எதிர்காலத்தை வளமானதாக மாற்றுவதில், இது போன்ற வன்முறைச் சம்பவங்களிலிருந்து அவர்களைப் பாதுகாப்பதில், மனித நேயத்துடன், மனிதர்களின் மீதான மாண்பு குறையாமல் அவர்களை வளர்ப்பதில் நாம் எங்கே தவறிழைக்கிறோம் என்பதைத் திறந்த மனதுடன் அணுகாமல், நாம் இதற்கான தீர்வை எப்போதும் அடைய முடியாது.

- சிவபாலன் இளங்கோவன், மனநல மருத்துவர், எழுத்தாளர்.தொடர்புக்கு: sivabalanela@gmail.com

Telangana hospitals see rush for death proof


Telangana hospitals see rush for death proof

27/09/2021

Government hospitals in Telangana have been witnessing a steady flow of applications for the death summary of those who succumbed to COVID-19. With the National Disaster Management Authority recommending an ex gratia of ₹50,000 to the kin of COVID-19 victims, the rush for the document is expected to intensify. In the procedures currently in place, the cause of death is only mentioned in the ‘Death Summary’ issued by a government hospital upon application.

Laparoscopic surgery is the best option to treat cancers: experts


Laparoscopic surgery is the best option to treat cancers: experts

‘It’s quicker, ensures faster recovery’

27/09/2021

Special CorrespondentCHENNAI

Laparoscopic surgery is the best option to treat cancerous tumours as it reduces the need for large incisions and is less painful, say experts.

At a wellness webinar hosted jointly by GEM Hospital and The Hindu, experts felt keyhole surgery was quicker and ensured faster recovery.

Ho-Seong Han, professor in the Department of Surgery in Seoul National University’s College of Medicine, said studies had shown that “keyhole surgery results may be better in cancer than even open surgery”.

Chairman of GEM Hospital C. Palanivelu referred to studies done in Asia that pointed out that laparoscopic and robotics surgeries can increase the chance of survival of patients.

“In open oesophageal cancer surgeries, there is a 60% higher possibility of complication. Anastomotic leak and lung infection could delay recovery and patients need longer hospital stay. Such complications are ruled out in keyhole surgery, he said.

Laparoscope provides better vision than the naked eye of the tissues. Use of laparoscopes to remove cancerous tumours ensures no spillage happens, explained P. Senthilnathan, head of the Department of HPB Surgery, Department of Minimal Access Surgery and Liver Transplantation, GEM Hospital.

M. Vijayakumar, Vice-Chancellor, Yenepoya Deemed University, Mangaluru, said if people came early for treatment, the outcome would be better.

‘Early withdrawal of joint FD only if there is mandate’


‘Early withdrawal of joint FD only if there is mandate’

27/09/2021

Sanjay VijayakumarCHENNAI

Banks will allow premature withdrawal by the surviving depositor in the case of joint fixed deposit and term deposit accounts in the event of the death of one of the two, only if there is a joint mandate from the depositors to do so as per the Reserve Bank of India (RBI) guidelines, which not many customers are aware of.

Consumer activist T. Sadagopan said there had been recent instances where the surviving depositors had approached banks for early withdrawal of fixed deposit accounts due to the death of the other account holder and their requests had been rejected by banks citing the RBI guidelines. In the case of joint fixed deposit and term deposit accounts, the joint holders choose between two mandates, “Either or Survivor” and “Former or Survivor”. In case of “Either or Survivor”, both the holders can operate the account while in the case of “Former or Survivor”, the former alone can operate the account when both are alive.

In both cases, banks are permitted to allow premature withdrawal of the deposit by the surviving joint depositor on the death of the other, only if there was a joint mandate from the depositors to this effect, according to the master circular on customer service by banks issued by RBI in 2015.

In the absence of a joint mandate, no pre-payment of the deposits would be allowed if the concurrence of the deceased joint holder had not been obtained as per the guidelines. If the operating instruction was “Either or Survivor” and one of the depositors died, no pre-payment of the fixed/term deposit may be allowed without the concurrence of the legal heirs of the deceased depositor. This would not stand in the way of making payment to the survivor on maturity, it said. In the case of “Former or Survivor” mandate, premature withdrawal would require the consent of both the parties, when both of them were alive, and that of the surviving depositor and the legal heirs of the deceased in the case of death of one of the depositors, the circular said.

KMCH opens free paediatric oncology ward


KMCH opens free paediatric oncology ward

27/09/2021

Staff Reporter COIMBATORE

Kovai Medical Center and Hospital (KMCH), Coimbatore, opened a free paediatric oncology ward on Sunday. M.S. Muthusmay, Deputy Inspector General of Police (Coimbatore range), inaugurated the facility at the KMCH Medical College General Hospital in the presence of V. Booma, professor and Head of the Department of Paediatrics at the Coimbatore Medical College Hospital and Thavamani Devi Palaniswami, vice-chairman of KMCH.

A release issued by the hospital said the paediatric oncology ward will cater to the needs of children with cancer who cannot afford appropriate therapy.

Children with potentially treatable cancers who cannot afford treatment would be treated in the unit, completely free of cost, it said. According to the hospital, the exclusive unit has both in-patient and day care services and it follows latest protocols for the kids with cancer.

KMCH executive director Arun N. Palaniswami said the ward will help the needy children with treatable cancer to overcome it.

University’s ‘no dowry’ demand from students draws criticism


University’s ‘no dowry’ demand from students draws criticism

Students asked to sign undertaking in University of Calicut

27/09/2021

K.S. SudhiKOCHI

The University of Calicut has come under fire for seeking an undertaking from its students that their admissions and degrees shall be cancelled or withdrawn if they breach the provisions of the Dowry Prohibition Act.

The university, following a proposal from Kerala Governor Arif Mohammad Khan, had asked the students to sign an undertaking stating that they would not demand or accept dowry, directly or indirectly.

B.G. Harindranath, former Kerala Law Secretary, felt that the order was legally unsustainable if challenged before a court of law. Though accepting or demanding dowry was punishable under the Act, the cancellation of a degree certificate was not contemplated under the Act, he said.

T. Asaf Ali, former director-general of prosecution, too, criticised the move, terming it illegal, unconstitutional, arbitrary and whimsical. A mere complaint to the police was sufficient for the university to deprive a candidate of his/her degree certificate, which could violate his/her constitutional right to life and livelihood. The withdrawal of a degree for an unrelated offence would deprive a person of his/her livelihood, which was unconstitutional, he said.

Kaleeswaram Raj, a Supreme Court lawyer, said the directive was irrational and unconstitutional. The awarding of a degree was based on educational parameters and could not be linked to an extraneous act. Creating awareness against dowry was one thing. But it was absurd to seek an undertaking that he/she would not engage in a penal act, he said.

M.K. Jayaraj, Vice-Chancellor of the university, said the intention was to create awareness among students against dowry.

Why Applied Mathematics has fewer applicants



Why Applied Mathematics has fewer applicants

Unavailability of NCERT books, fewer teachers and limited knowledge about job prospects are worrying students

c-Jagriti.Kumari@timesgroup.com

27.09.2021

To help students develop an understanding of basic mathematical and statistical tools and their applications in various fields including business, Economics and social sciences, the Central Board for Secondary Education (CBSE) introduced Applied Mathematics as an elective for class XI from the academic year 2020-21. The introduction of the new subject is for students who opted for Basic Mathematics instead of the standard version in class X boards. In 2020, out of around 19 lakh students, as many as 6 lakh students opted for Basic Mathematics in class X boards while around 13 lakh students appeared for the standard version of the question paper.

Few takers

Achala Verma, PGT Mathematics at Birla Balika Vidyapeeth, Pilani, explains that lack of awareness about the subject led to fewer takers. “There were no takers for the subject as an elective, in my school last year. This year also, only a handful of students have opted for it,” says Verma. On why this was the case, Verma reasons that students are clueless about the career prospects after studying Applied Mathematics. “Most students opt for subjects that offer a lucrative career opportunity. Hence, students need to be apprised about the future of Applied Mathematics,” says Verma.

Besides, the subject was introduced by the Board when Covid-19 pandemic kept schools closed, says Vivek Choudhary, PGT Mathematics at a Faridabad-based school. “Closure of schools took a huge toll as students and teachers both were clueless about the syllabus. Communication with students and parents was another challenge during the virtual mode of education. Having detailed information might have helped us in spreading awareness about the subject,” says Choudhary.

Challenges

Unavailability of textbooks is a major challenge for both teachers and students, says Choudhary. “Majority of us rely on NCERT textbooks for the board exams and other competitive examinations. But no dedicated books for Applied Math has been published yet,” says Choudhary, adding that study materials provided by the CBSE on its website is good, but more study material is needed.

When contacted, a source on condition of anonymity at NCERT says, “We have been frequently getting queries from parents and students for Applied Mathematics books. The books are not getting published as the government is yet to send the proposal for the publication of the books.

Syllabus

Applied Mathematics includes topics such as Number Theory, Interpretation of Data, Analysis of Data, Commercial Mathematics, Set Theory, Relation and Function, Algebra, Trigonometry, Fundamentals of Calculus, Logical Reasoning, Commercial Mathematics, Probability, Linear Programming, Analysis of time-based Data etc

Students who lost parents to Covid need not pay exam fee


Students who lost parents to Covid need not pay exam fee

TIMES NEWS NETWORK

27.09.2021

In a rare gesture of compassion and support, the Central Board of Secondary Education (CBSE) has decided to exempt students who lost both their parents or their only surviving parent to Covid-19 from paying the CBSE examination fees. This was notified by the Board on Tuesday evening.

The CBSE affiliated schools in the country are already in the process of collecting fees and finalising the list of candidates for the class X and XII board examinations. A student to be included in the list of candidates (LOC), will have to pay the examination fees. The process of LOC started on September 17 and must be completed before September 30, the board had notified in an earlier statement.

The basic fee for five subjects is Rs 1,500 for class X and XII, and Rs 1,200 for SC/ST candidates of Delhi government schools. Along with the additional amount for each practical and additional or optional subject, the total fee would amount to around Rs 2,500 for many class XII students whose subjects have the practical component.

NEWS TODAY 22.04.2024