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Supreme Court stays Madras HC order on Neet marks

With the apex court staying this order, admission process can proceed further.

New Delhi: Observing that the Madras high court cannot dole out 196 marks to students across the board, the Supreme Court on Friday stayed the high court order directing award of additional marks to candidates who took the Neet examination in Tamil.

The high court had asked the CBSE not to proceed with the process of second counselling for admission to MBBS and BDS courses. With the apex court staying this order, admission process can proceed further.

A Bench of Justices S.A. Bobde and L. Nageswara Rao granted stay of the high court while acting on an appeal filed by the CBSE said the high court order directing it to grant four marks each for 49 erroneous questions in the Tamil version of this year’s Neet.

The court said awarding of such additional marks across the board for all the 23,000 and odd students who took Neet exam in Tamil would upset the ongoing counselling process. Further when the first counselling has been completed and admissions had already been made, revising the rank list would result in chaos.

The Bench agreed with the CBSE submission that an information bulletin of the Neet had said that in case of any ambiguity in the bilingual texts, the English version would be treated as final. The bulletin had clarified that “candidates opting for regional languages would be provided bilingual test booklets in selected regional languages and in English. In case of any ambiguity in translation of any of the questions, its English version shall be treated as final.

When senior counsel Siddharth Luthra and Prasad pointed out that the translation was so absurd that ‘Cheetah’ was translated as ‘Sita’ instead of ‘Siruthai’, the Bench said “it is true that the translation is inaccurate and misleading” but “doling out marks to all is not the solution.”

The Bench wondered as to what would be the fate of those students from Tamil Nadu who chose to take NEET test in English and not in Tamil. How can they be discriminated?

The CBSE along with 20 affected students submitted that the High Court had erroneously passed the order at this stage saying the 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 had 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 Bench while issuing notice to Mr. Rangarajan, MP on whose petition the High Court passed the order seeking his response and posted the matter for further hearing on August 7, when it will consider suggestions as to how such errors could be avoided in future.

( Source : Deccan Chronicle. )
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