Saturday, May 16, 2026
State unlikely to enforce NMC order on MBBS fees for four and a half years
State unlikely to enforce NMC order on MBBS fees for four and a half years
The Hindu (Kochi) A.S. Jayanth KOZHIKODE 4 May 2026
The recent directive of the National Medical Commission (NMC) to medical colleges in the country to levy fees from MBBS students only for four and ahalf years is unlikely to be implemented in Kerala now.
In the order issued on April 7, the NMC had said that collecting fee from students for the entire duration of the course for five years or five and a half years would not be permitted. The MBBS course comprises four and a half years of academic study, followed by one year of compulsory rotating internship. In government medical colleges in Kerala, the annual fee is over ₹30,000, while in selff inancing colleges it is around ₹8 lakh and above for the general category and ₹21 lakh and above for the NRI category.
This fee is determined and revised by a fee regulatory committee. It is now headed by retired High Court judge K.K. Dineshan. However, the incumbent LDF government is unlikely to take a decision on the directive now, as its tenure is set to end soon.
Mr. Dineshan told The Hindu recently that the fee regulatory committee was bound by judgments of the Supreme Court of India and the Kerala High Court, as well as laws passed by the Kerala Legislative Assembly.
He said the fee fixed by the committee for a batch would remain in force for the entire five year course. He pointed out that the High Court had, in 2022, clarified that the NMC’s office memorandum stipulating government fees for 50% of seats in self financing medical colleges need not be implemented in Kerala.
Meanwhile, the Kerala University of Health Sciences (KUHS) is of the view that the directive should be implemented in the State.
KUHS Vice Chancellor Mohanan Kunnummal told The Hindu that other States such as Tamil Nadu and Karnataka were already planning to enforce it. “However, we are not in a position to express our views on this because KUHS is not part of the fee regulatory committee… There is a contention that the entire course fee is divided over five years, so it can continue that way.
But such an argument has not been explained anywhere officially,” he added. ‘The NMC said that collecting fees for five years or more was not consistent with the prescribed academic structure of the MBBS programme and could result in charges for periods that do not constitute academic teaching.
“Any instance of noncompliance shall be viewed seriously and appropriate action initiated by the Commission, as per the extant statutory and regulatory provisions,” the order added.
The Real Reason Jayalalithaa 'Humiliated' Vijay In 2013 — And Why It Makes His 2026 Oath Extraordinary
The Real Reason Jayalalithaa 'Humiliated' Vijay In 2013 — And Why It Makes His 2026 Oath Extraordinary
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Jayalalithaa put him in the back row in 2013. He returned to the same stadium as Chief Minister in 2026. Tamil Nadu's best revenge takes time — but always lands.

She compared herself to Draupadi after her 2013 humiliation and returned as CM. Then she did it to Vijay. He said nothing. He, too, came back.
In 2013, Tamil Nadu’s most powerful politician humiliated its biggest film star at a stadium in Chennai — gave him a back-row seat, like he didn’t matter. Thirteen years later, that same film star walked into that same stadium as Chief Minister. Some stories write themselves. This one took a decade.
The occasion was the Centenary Celebrations of Indian Cinema — a grand, glittering event attended by the President of India, Pranab Mukherjee, and Chief Minister Jayalalithaa. Vijay arrived, already unhappy. His film Thalaivaa had faced serious release problems and nobody — not the industry, not the state government — had stood by him. He came anyway, half-heartedly.
What happened next became industry legend. While actors of his age and stature were seated in the front rows, Vijay was given a seat at the very back. He was silent, sitting alone — until Chiyaan Vikram, who had been given a front-row seat, chose to walk back and sit beside him. Aishwarya Rajinikanth followed. Vijay said nothing. He did not complain. But Tamil Nadu noticed.
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Was This Deliberate — And Why Did Jayalalithaa Do It?
Almost certainly. By publicly humiliating Vijay at such a high-profile event, Jayalalithaa was sending a message — discouraging his political ambitions at a time when he was still primarily a film star, preventing him from gaining a foothold in her domain.
Tamil Nadu had already seen one actor — MGR — storm the political establishment through sheer mass adulation.
Jayalalithaa, who had learned the game under MGR herself, knew exactly what a back-row seat could communicate. In Tamil Nadu’s cultural context, where film stars are often revered, the act of being publicly sidelined was a symbolic slap.
Does Tamil Nadu Have A History of Humiliation Fuelling Political Comebacks?
Remarkably, yes — and the parallel closest to home is Jayalalithaa herself. In 1989, Jayalalithaa was allegedly assaulted inside the Tamil Nadu Assembly — her saree and hair pulled amid violent chaos between DMK and AIADMK members.
Walking out in tears, she compared herself to Draupadi from the Mahabharata and vowed she would never return to the Assembly except as Chief Minister.
Two years later, she won the 1991 election and kept that vow. The woman who weaponised humiliation to fuel her own rise used the same weapon on Vijay — and created the same fire.
The entire stadium erupted when Vijay began his speech as the new Chief Minister of Tamil Nadu — at the very same Jawaharlal Nehru Stadium where he had once sat silently in the last row. Jayalalithaa gave him a back seat in 2013. He took the head seat in 2026. In Tamil Nadu politics, it seems, the best revenge is always a long time coming — and always spectacular when it arrives.
Busted by DVAC, office assistant jumps to death
Busted by DVAC, office assistant jumps to death
TIMES NEWS NETWORK 16.05.2026
Trichy : An assistant at the block development office in Tiruvarur jumped to death from the third floor of his office building on Thursday evening while being interrogated by Directorate of Vigilance and Anti-Corruption (DVAC) officials after his arrest, along with the BDO, for accepting a bribe.
The deceased was identified as R Suresh Kumar, 51, a resident of Thuvakudi in Trichy district. According to sources, Bharathidasan, a resident of Tiruvarur district, went to the office a few days ago seeking a plot approval receipt. The BDO for village panchayat scheme, S Swaminathan, along with his assistant Suresh Kumar, allegedly demanded a bribe of ₹7,000 to issue the receipt. Bharathidasan lodged a complaint with DVAC in Tiruvarur. After conducting a preliminary inquiry, DVAC confirmed the bribe demand and planned a trap. The sleuths gave Bharathidasan ₹7,000 in currency notes laced with a chemical powder to be handed over to the two officials. On Thursday afternoon, as Swaminathan and Suresh Kumar took the money from Bharathidasan, the DVAC team caught them red-handed. During the inquiry, Suresh Kumar excused himself for a break, went to the terrace and jumped off the building. (Assistance for those having suicidal thoughts is available on TN’s health helpline 104 and Sneha’s suicide prevention helpline 04424640050)
Friday, May 15, 2026
Groom not the man she met on Instagram, bride calls off shaadi
Groom not the man she met on Instagram, bride calls off shaadi
MATCH MISMATCH 15.05.2026
Lucknow : A friendship that began on Instagram ended in chaos at a wedding venue in UP’s Shahabad, after the bride alleged that the groom was not the same person she had connected with on the social media platform.
The wedding was called off. Police registered an FIR against 10 people on cheating and criminal conspiracy charges, and arrested five, including the groom. Cops said the woman had befriended an Instagram user who identified himself as “Rahul Mishra” and claimed to be serving in the Army. Over time, the two grew close and decided to marry.
The woman told police that Rahul had even visited Shahabad earlier and met her in person. After discussing with her elder sister, the wedding was scheduled for May 12. On Tuesday, a wedding procession arrived, guests were welcomed, and the rituals began. However, during the garlanding ceremony, the bride alleged that the groom was not the man she had met and interacted with online.
She refused to marry the one in front of her. Police said Devendra Parmar — who had arrived as the groom — claimed the woman had been speaking to him all along. He denied knowing anyone called Rahul Mishra. The situation quickly escalated into chaos, with some people at the venue assaulting the groom and members of his wedding party. Police were informed, and a team rushed to the spot and detained several baraatis.
“If the person she earlier met was someone else, how did Devendra Parmar know when and where to arrive with the wedding procession? Who posed as Rahul Mishra and met the woman? These are some of the questions we are probing,” SHO Arvind Rai said. TNN
NMC sets May 30 deadline for MBBS renewal process
NMC sets May 30 deadline for MBBS renewal process
Anuja.Jaiswal@timesofindia.com 15.05.2026
New Delhi : National Medical Commission has directed all medical colleges across the country to submit detailed annual disclosure reports by May 30 for renewal of MBBS seats for the 2026- 27 academic session, warning that no extension will be granted beyond the deadline.
In a notice issued by the Under-Graduate Medical Education Board, the NMC said all existing medical colleges with approval to run MBBS courses must upload mandatory institutional data on the commission’s portal under the Maintenance of Standards of Medical Education Regulations, 2023. The disclosure process forms a key part of the annual renewal mechanism through which colleges receive permission to continue admitting undergraduate medical students.
The NMC has also made it mandatory for colleges to pay an online processing fee of ₹3.54 lakh, including GST, through the designated portal while applying for renewal of MBBS seats.
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