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Will act on Neet after CBSE move, says Tamil Nadu government

Health minister C. Vijayabaskar said the government was in favour of Tamil students vis-a-vis the National Entrance-cum-Eligibility Test (Neet).

Chennai: The Tamil Nadu government on Wednesday assured support to Neet candidates from the state in the wake of the Madras high court’s direction to CBSE to grant grace marks and said it would act as soon as the board responds to the court order.

On Tuesday, the Madurai bench of the Madras High Court had ordered the CBSE to grant 196 marks- 4 marks each for 49 erroneous questions in the Tamil version of this year’s Neet - to those who took the exam in the regional language.

Health minister C. Vijayabaskar said the government was in “favour” of Tamil students vis-a-vis the National Entrance-cum-Eligibility Test (Neet). He said, “we have not received” a detailed copy of the judgment. “The (high court) direction has been given to CBSE only. Action will be taken on behalf of our government based on the further steps to be taken by CBSE,” he told reporters here in response to a query in this connection.

Meanwhile, the CPI welcomed the court verdict, with the party’s state secretary R Mutharasan urging the CBSE to implement the court order. “The state committee of the CPI welcomes the high court order,” he said in a statement.

Referring to reports of CBSE mulling an appeal against the verdict, he said this would amount to “confirming the social injustice meted out” to the medical aspirants. The CBSE should refrain from going on appeal and must implement the court order, he said.

Passing the orders on a public interest litigation, the court had directed CBSE to consequently revise the list of eligible candidates and publish it afresh.

The petitioner in that case, senior CPI(M) leader and Rajya Sabha MP T K Rangarajan had sought full marks for the 49 questions, saying key words in Tamil questions were wrongly translated from English and this caused confusion among the students. There were 180 questions with a total mark of 720 in the Neet. The judges said the students who took the Neet for admission to medical and dental colleges in Tamil should be suitably compensated to provide a level-playing ground. The CBSE conducted the Neet on May 6 in 136 cities in 11 languages, the results of which wereannounced on June 4. In Tamil Nadu, about 1.07 lakh candidates took the test across 170 centres in 10 cities.

( Source : Deccan Chronicle with agency inputs )
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