117 medical students granted admission in a private medical college in violation of law to pay Rs. 3 lac each to govt.

Updated on: Monday, September 03, 2012

One hundred seventeen medical students, who were granted admission in a private medical college in violation of law, were today directed by the Supreme Court to pay Rs 3 lakh each to the government.
 
Refusing to cancel their admission which was done in 2008, a bench of justices A K Patnaik and Swatanter Kumar  directed the students to pay the amount which would be used for improvement of infrastructure and laboratories in government medical colleges.
 
The court also directed the Geetanjali Medical College and Hospital in Udaipur in Rajasthan to surrender 107 seats in a phase-wise manner which will be filled up by the students selected through common entrance test conducted by the state government.
 
"We, therefore, hold that each of the 117 students who have been admitted in the MBBS seats in the college will pay Rs 3 lakh to the state government on account of their admission in violation of the MCI regulations and the total amount received by the state government from the 117 students will be spent for improvement of infrastructure and laboratories in the government medical colleges of the state and for no other purpose," the bench said.
 
"The college which was responsible for making the admissions in violation of MCI regulations will surrender 107 MBBS seats to the state government phase wise, not more than 10 in any academic year beginning from the academic year 2012-2013 and these surrendered seats will be filled up by the students selected in RPMT or any other common entrance test conducted by the state government," the bench said.

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