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Supreme Court posts Ukraine college students plea for November 1, 2022 

3 min read

Express News Service

NEW DELHI: The Supreme Court on Tuesday posted the pleas filed by college students who had returned from warfare torn Ukraine searching for permission to proceed their medical training in India for November 1, 2022. 

Senior Advocate Rajiv Dutta showing for the scholars submitted earlier than a bench led by Justice Hemant Gupta {that a} assembly needed to be performed whereby has to take choice. 

“We’re waiting something positive may come. They have been informing but nothing is coming through. This is situation where we need their help,” he added. 

Earlier whereas appreciating centre’s stand of introducing “Academic Mobility Programme” that may give virtually 20k Ukraine returnees likelihood to proceed their medical training in alternate universities of different appropriate international locations, it requested centre to develop a portal specifying necessities resembling charges of faculty, seats obtainable of those universities.

“You can develop a portal, give them the options so that the students can be transferred. We appreciate that India can’t accommodate 20/30k students and they will have to study outside India. It should be transparently available so that they can take up the course. One liasioning officer will go mad. What is the fee, colleges available, how many seats are available and which college,” a bench of Justices Hemant Gupta and Sudhanshu Dhulia stated. 

Court instructed this whereas contemplating the batch of pleas filed by college students who had returned from Ukraine searching for to proceed their medical training in India. 

In its response, the Health Ministry had stated that Ukraine returnees with “poor merit” couldn’t be allowed to proceed their training in India. The Centre had stated that they must utilise the educational mobility programme proposed by Ukrainian universities which have already been “no objection” by National Medical Commission and Centre. It was additionally stated that the programme would do justice to a lot of the aggrieved college students and in addition defend the profession of almost 20,000 Indian college students who needed to be evacuated from warfare torn nation. 

NEW DELHI: The Supreme Court on Tuesday posted the pleas filed by college students who had returned from warfare torn Ukraine searching for permission to proceed their medical training in India for November 1, 2022. 

Senior Advocate Rajiv Dutta showing for the scholars submitted earlier than a bench led by Justice Hemant Gupta {that a} assembly needed to be performed whereby has to take choice. 

“We’re waiting something positive may come. They have been informing but nothing is coming through. This is situation where we need their help,” he added. 

Earlier whereas appreciating centre’s stand of introducing “Academic Mobility Programme” that may give virtually 20k Ukraine returnees likelihood to proceed their medical training in alternate universities of different appropriate international locations, it requested centre to develop a portal specifying necessities resembling charges of faculty, seats obtainable of those universities.

“You can develop a portal, give them the options so that the students can be transferred. We appreciate that India can’t accommodate 20/30k students and they will have to study outside India. It should be transparently available so that they can take up the course. One liasioning officer will go mad. What is the fee, colleges available, how many seats are available and which college,” a bench of Justices Hemant Gupta and Sudhanshu Dhulia stated. 

Court instructed this whereas contemplating the batch of pleas filed by college students who had returned from Ukraine searching for to proceed their medical training in India. 

In its response, the Health Ministry had stated that Ukraine returnees with “poor merit” couldn’t be allowed to proceed their training in India. The Centre had stated that they must utilise the educational mobility programme proposed by Ukrainian universities which have already been “no objection” by National Medical Commission and Centre. It was additionally stated that the programme would do justice to a lot of the aggrieved college students and in addition defend the profession of almost 20,000 Indian college students who needed to be evacuated from warfare torn nation.